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The Medici effect: multidisciplinary insights for entrepreneurship research
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

The Medici effect: multidisciplinary insights for entrepreneurship research

Younggeun Lee, Andres Felipe Cortes, Anthony Di Benedetto, Pol Herrmann, Mathew Hughes, Phillip H. Kim, Haemin Dennis Park and Sai Lan
New England journal of entrepreneurship, Vol.27(1), pp.2-8
30/07/2024

Abstract

Entrepreneurship
In the 15th century, the Medici family in Italy sponsored artists, philosophers, scientists and financiers from various fields (Hibbard, 1974). The most prominent role of the Medici family was to gather people together to share intellect from each discipline (Padgett and Ansell, 1993). Eventually, people in this network led the historical period of innovation known as the Renaissance. Those included Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Galileo Galilei, Raffaello Sanzio, Donatello and Sandro Botticelli. “The Medici effect” represents a practical illustration of promoting innovation through collaboration across different knowledge domains and the sharing of diverse perspectives and experiences (Johansson, 2004). The Medici effect suggests innovation flourishes when ideas and concepts from diverse disciplines, fields and cultures intersect (Johansson, 2017).
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