This well-written book is the first to deal with entrepreneurship in all its aspects. It considers the economic, psychological, political, legal and cultural dimensions of entrepreneurship from a market-process perspective.
Though central to the market process, entrepreneurship is often overlooked by theorists. This work presents the entrepreneur as theorist, developing ideas to be tested in the market, creating new ventures through trial and error.
It identifies the early reception of Paradise Lost as a site of contest over the place of literature in political and religious controversy and explains how it prompted its earliest readers and critics to innovate new critical strategies