Hierarchy and heterarchy in (impact) finance: an ontological analysis

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28 mars 2024

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info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/issn/2421-5864

Ce document est lié à :
info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/issn/0035-6212

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Noriaki Okamoto, « Hierarchy and heterarchy in (impact) finance: an ontological analysis », Rivista di estetica, ID : 10.4000/estetica.11395


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Although finance is ubiquitous in modern life, its ontological foundation is rarely discussed. This essay considers some key characteristics of finance from a social ontological perspective. It initially argues that money requires some sort of representation, and that financial institutions rely on various forms of cognition as well as documents anchoring representations. From that standpoint, one of the crucial aspects of finance is that it provides reference points through the process of quantification. These reference points are numerical representations that allow people to make comparisons. Comparing numbers inevitably creates different hierarchies. However, a specific hierarchy can become outdated or less significant. In such situations, a heterarchy can be created outside the hierarchy. This essay illustrates the appearance of heterarchy in the recent shift toward impact finance, in which financial hierarchies encompass heterarchical systems that are finally replaced by quantifiable hierarchical metrics. With this example, the present research demonstrates that finance tends to convert heterarchical systems into hierarchical ones by quantification through monetary units.

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