Entrepreneurs of Chaos? From Disruptive Innovation to Negentropic Entrepreneurship - Conference

19. May - 20. May

19-20 May 2025, 9:00 am - 7:00 pm, Central Building

This two-day symposium, comprising a day of lectures and a day of workshops, aims to draw up a radical critique of the ideology of disruption and impact, which is currently dominating the thinking and practices of technological innovation and entrepreneurship by drawing on the work of the French philosopher Bernard Stiegler, but also by going beyond it. Stiegler has argued that the current polycrisis situation can be understood as an increase of entropy in various forms: physical, biological, social, and psychological. Originally developed in the context of thermodynamics, the physical concept of entropy refers to the degradation of energy in a system to a non-usable state, implying a tendency towards disorganization and disorder. Life, however, strives towards negative entropy, i.e., the accumulation and maintenance of energy. Following this notion, Stiegler and others work with the notion of negentropy, a new word creation expressing the idea of negative entropy. Against this background, this symposium aims to bring together entrepreneurship and innovation scholars with contemporary philosophy to, first, develop a critique of the concepts of disruption and impact in the context of (technological) innovation and entrepreneurship and, second, develop an alternative model of technological innovation and entrepreneurship that considers economic, social, cultural, and ecological balances. Thus, we wish to discuss and develop a negentropic conception of entrepreneurship that is contributory to social and ecological well-being, foregrounding construction, creation and transformation rather than disruption, exploitation and degeneration as central features of contemporary entrepreneurship.

Organised by Igor Galligo, with Erich Hörl, Elke Schüßler and Matthias Wenzel.
Organising institution: Research Initiative on the Disruptive Condition.
Academic partners: Center for Critical Studies (CCS), Center for Organization and Social Transformation (LOST), DFG Network "A Temporal Perspective on Disruptive Innovation Processes.

Language: English

For more information including speakers and program see here
Poster available here.