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Including a Symposium on the Historical Epistemology of Economics

Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology

Format: Hardback
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited, Bingley, United Kingdom
Published: 22nd Aug 2017
Dimensions: w 152mm h 229mm d 13mm
Weight: 426g
ISBN-10: 1787145387
ISBN-13: 9781787145382
Barcode No: 9781787145382
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Synopsis
Volume 35A of Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology features a symposium on historical epistemology, guest edited by Till Duppe and Harro Maas. The symposium includes new research from the guest editors, as well as from Loic Charles and Christine There, Hsiang-Ke Chao, Tobias Vogelsang, and Thomas Stapleford. This internationally renowned cast of contributors offers a variety of perspectives on one of the major approaches in empirical philosophy of science and economic thought. Volume 35A also includes a new research paper by Cameron Weber on the paradoxical notion of value employed in the economics of art and culture. An archival piece by Marc Nerlove, winner of the John Bates Clark Medal in 1969, completes the volume. Originally written in the summer of 1953, when Nerlove was a 19-year-old graduate student serving as research assistant to Jacob Marschak and Tjalling Koopmans at the Cowles Commission, the paper relates the ideas of Cournot to the concept of Nash equilibrium. The paper was long-forgotten by Nerlove and has only recently been rediscovered among the Marschak Papers at UCLA. Olav Bjerkholt contributes a foreword to Nerlove's archival piece.

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Researchers from Europe, North America, Taiwan, and Brazil present six papers from a symposium on the historical epistemology of economics, along with an essay on the "value paradox" in art economics and a classic essay on Augustin Cournot and the bargaining problem. Symposium essays discuss the scientific understanding of the 18th-century French physiocrats, Stanley Jevons' and Alfred Marshall's diagrammatical methods, how US military administrators of postwar Germany reconfigured the institutional context to generate policy-relevant economic statistics and reports, Gerard Debreu's personal values and their influences on his theorizing about economic value, and the French tradition of historical epistemology. -- Annotation (c)2017 * (protoview.com) *