A New Classification of Technologies
Mario Coccia

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel taxonomy classifying technologies based on their interaction types within complex systems, aiming to understand their evolutionary pathways and coevolution over time.
Contribution
It introduces a new theoretical framework categorizing technological interactions into four types, providing insights into long-term technological evolution.
Findings
Defines four interaction typologies: parasitism, commensalism, mutualism, and symbiosis.
Predicts evolutionary pathways and coevolutionary processes of technologies.
Provides a foundation for further research on technological and economic change.
Abstract
This study here suggests a classification of technologies based on taxonomic characteristics of interaction between technologies in complex systems that is not a studied research field in economics of technical change. The proposed taxonomy here categorizes technologies in four typologies, in a broad analogy with the ecology: 1) technological parasitism is a relationship between two technologies T1 and T2 in a complex system S where one technology T1 benefits from the interaction with T2, whereas T2 has a negative side from interaction with T1; 2) technological commensalism is a relationship between two technologies in S where one technology benefits from the other without affecting it; 3) technological mutualism is a relationship in which each technology benefits from the activity of the other within complex systems; 4) technological symbiosis is a long-term interaction between two (or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovation Diffusion and Forecasting · Economic and Technological Innovation · Economic Development and Digital Transformation
