What is it for a company to survive over a thousand years? This currently tells you more about Japan and the relatively stable cultural institutions and non-Western approach to corporate life than it does about what it means to be a company. But in a thousand years time, there'll also probably be Western companies which are that old.
But consider how varied the political and cultural landscape will be when you compare 1500 with 2500. A company (rather than just a bunch of people performing the same work in the same place for that time - like the family farm, for example) has a legal framework which can change over time. Think how many job types, and by implication, though to a lesser extent, companies there have been and will ever be in the history of economics. It is not a surprise that the average life of a company is much shorter than this. It isn't so bad a fate for companies that they die. Though there's much more to a company's end than it dying.
If a company is an animal, then there's the equivalent to animal ethology - the set of behaviours it currently engages in. There's its own life history, birth, death, marriages, offspring, family. There's the science of examining the company as a species - how that species interacts, competes. But before all of that, there's the basic question of why? In biology, you get something like the selfish gene/Hamiltonian kind of answer to the why of an organism's existence. What's the answer to the primordial 'why' with the company?
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