Authored by Yochai Benkler
Purchase This Publication Book WebsiteBook Description, from Random House:
What do Wikipedia, Zip Car’s business model, Barack Obama's
presidential campaign, and a small group of lobster fishermen have in
common? They all show the power and promise of human cooperation in
transforming our businesses, our government, and our society at large.
Because today, when the costs of collaborating are lower than ever
before, there are no limits to what we can achieve by working together.
For centuries, we as a society have operated according to a very
unflattering view of human nature: that, humans are universally and
inherently selfish creatures. As a result, our most deeply entrenched
social structures – our top-down business models, our punitive legal
systems, our market-based approaches to everything from education
reform to environmental regulation - have been built on the premise
that humans are driven only by self interest, programmed to respond
only to the invisible hand of the free markets or the iron fist of a
controlling government.
In the last decade, however, this fallacy has finally begun to unravel,
as hundreds of studies conducted across dozens of cultures have found
that most people will act far more cooperatively than previously
believed. Here, Harvard University Professor Yochai Benkler draws on
cutting-edge findings from neuroscience, economics, sociology,
evolutionary biology, political science, and a wealth of real world
examples to debunk this long-held myth and reveal how we can harness
the power of human cooperation to improve business processes, design
smarter technology, reform our economic systems, maximize volunteer
contributions to science, reduce crime, improve the efficacy of civic
movements, and more.
For example, he describes how:
A must-read for anyone who wants to understand the dynamics of
cooperation in 21st century life, The Penguin and the Leviathan not
only challenges so many of the ways in which we live and work, it
forces us to rethink our entire view of human nature.
Last updated September 21, 2011