- Emergent organisation
The term emergent organizations (alternatively emergent organisations) first appeared in the late 1990s and was the topic of the Seventh Annual Washington Evolutionary Systems Conference at
University of Ghent ,Belgium in May, 1999.An emergent
organization differs from a traditional organization in that its existence spontaneously emerges from and exists in a complex dynamic environment ormarket place , rather than being a construct or copy of something that already exists.Emergent organizations and their dynamics pose interesting questions; for example, how does such an organization achieve closure and stability?
Alternatively,
James R. Taylor wrote in 2000 his seminal book, "The Emergent Organization", where he suggests that all organizations emerge from communication, especially from the interplay of conversation and text. This idea concerns human organizations, but is consistent withLeibniz orGabriel Tarde 'smonadology , or withAlfred North Whitehead 'sprocess philosophy , which explains the macro - both in human and non-human "societies" - from the processes taking place between its constituent parts.See also
*
Emergence
*Chaos_theory
*Evolution
*Natural selection
*Organizational behavior
*Organizational development
*Philosophy
*Self-organizing system
*Ubiquitous command and control posits the primitive notion of "agreement" to explain unity (e.g., closure and stability) in human societies
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