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  • 2010-2014  (5)
  • 1955-1959
  • Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Pub. Ltd  (5)
  • Wirtschaftswissenschaften  (5)
  • Economics  (5)
Datasource
Material
Language
Years
  • 2010-2014  (5)
  • 1955-1959
Year
Subjects(RVK)
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Pub. Ltd
    ISBN: 9781781951934
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xi, 179 pages)
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    RVK:
    Keywords: Smith, Adam Influence ; Economic policy ; Economics History ; Economists ; Economics ; Electronic books ; Smith, Adam 1723-1790 ; Wirtschaftstheorie ; Staat ; Rezeption ; Wirtschaftswissenschaften ; Wirtschaftspolitik
    Abstract: 'This important book presents a compelling case that traditional received theory (Paretian-utilitarian) has followed a dangerous path - one not espoused by Adam Smith and Nobel Laureate James Buchanan. The latter viewed value and preferences as mutable (not "given") and believed that rights systems must underlie moral law and impartial justice. Men must be "taken as they are" in this system. Adoption of the Smith-Buchanan paradigm, Professor Roth brilliantly argues, leads to the kind of moral and political philosophy that informs the science of statutes and legislators that underpins our Founding Fathers' republican self-government project.' (Bob Ekelund, Professor and Eminent Scholar in Economics (Emeritus), Auburn University, US). -- Economists and the State shows how modern economists have strayed far from Adam Smith's procedurally based, consequence-detached political economy. Timothy P. Roth argues that this "wrong turn" has left economists ill-equipped to address an expanding federal enterprise and new threats to our self-governing republic. He subsequently sets out to offer ways to redress this. -- Making the case for a return to the moral and political philosophy that informed Adam Smith's 'science of the statesman or legislator,' this book argues that economists must reject their relentlessly utilitarian, teleological theory of the state and embrace Nobel Laureate James M. Buchanan's constitutional political economy project. The author outlines the specific requirements of a non-teleological conception of the state - a conception that is vital to the continuing development of a theory of the state informed by a prior ethical commitment to the moral equivalence of persons. -- This book will appeal to scholars and students of political economy, political thought, public choice economics and Austrian economics as well as to practitioners and policy-makers interested in how economics should support those serving the public.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9781782540625
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xiv, 269 p) , ill
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als How to get published in the best entrepreneurship journals
    DDC: 808.066658421
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Fachzeitschrift ; Entrepreneurship ; Wissenschaftliche Publikation ; Betriebswirte ; Bibliometrie ; Business writing ; Entrepreneurship Periodicals ; Publishing ; Business literature Publishing ; Entrepreneurship*Veröffentlichung*Ratgeber ; Wirtschaftswissenschaften*Zeitschriftenaufsatz ; Electronic books ; Wirtschaftswissenschaften ; Zeitschriftenaufsatz ; Veröffentlichung
    Abstract: 'This book should be required for all doctoral students studying entrepreneurship, and it will be very helpful to junior faculty in entrepreneurship and those transitioning to the field as well. Valuable insights are provided for publishing various types of articles (for example, literature reviews, qualitative research, cases, and so on) in top journals focusing on entrepreneurship, general management, and related disciplines.' - Gary Castrogiovanni, Florida Atlantic University, US. 'The wisdom and guidance provided by this stellar group of authors will be invaluable to scholars, especially those seeking to publish entrepreneurship research in top journals. The diversity of content is also exciting; for example, the inclusion of publication ethics and how to publish cases. Hopefully, this will become a much-used resource and help to reduce current high desk rejection rates.' - D. Ray Bagby, Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice. 'This book fills a critical need in the field. It is co-edited by two highly respected and accomplished entrepreneurship scholars, and the chapters are prepared by seasoned authors who provide the knowledge of how to publish research in the top entrepreneurship journals. Publication in these journals has become highly competitive, with only a small percentage of the submitted manuscripts accepted. As such, this is a highly valuable treatise for entrepreneurship scholars and PhD students. It should be required reading for all entrepreneurship researchers.' - Michael A. Hitt, Texas A&M University, US. 'Life would have been so much easier had I had the benefit of this terrific book. It provides concrete and actionable advice on all aspects of publishing in the field of entrepreneurship, and indeed other domains of management. It counsels young researchers on how to develop and formulate research questions, how to integrate them into the existing literature and to highlight their contribution, and how to build and argue sound hypotheses. It provides insight and guidance for conducting both quantitative and qualitative research. It even shows which journals might be most useful for scholars aiming to "up their game". There is no question that the sound advice given here by Audretsch, Corbett, Fayolle, Honig, Wright and other stars in the field will focus readers on the essentials so vital in today's highly competitive and ever more exacting publishing environment.' - From the foreword by Danny Miller. Competition to publish in the top j ...
    Abstract: 1. Thinking and writing for scholarly publication in entrepreneurship / Alain Fayolle -- 2. Getting published in entrepreneurship journals / Mike Wright -- 3. The review process / Mike Wright -- 4. Getting published - and cited - in entrepreneurship : reflections on ten papers / Per Davidsson -- 5. From idea to publication : managing the research process / Robert Blackburn and Friederike Welter -- 6. Doing a research literature review / Hermann Frank and Isabella Hatak -- 7. Ethics and publishing in entrepreneurship research / Benson Honig -- 8. Moving from the periphery to the inner circle : getting published from your thesis / Sally Jones and Helle Neergaard -- 9. Do European scholars have specific problems getting published in Anglo-Saxon journals? / Dimo Dimov -- 10. How to publish qualitative entrepreneurship research in top journals / Nicole Coviello -- 11. Laying the foundations for Asia-focused research through qualitative research / David Ahlstrom and Garry Bruton -- 12. Publishing cases in entrepreneurship journals / Franz Lohrke, Melissa Baucus and Charles Carson -- 13. Getting published in entrepreneurship policy / David B. Audretsch -- 14. Positioning entrepreneurship research for general management journals / Andrew Corbett
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Pub. Ltd
    ISBN: 9781784710552
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (1 v) , cm
    Series Statement: Elgar research reviews in economics
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Recent developments in the economics of happiness
    DDC: 330.019
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Glücksforschung ; Happiness ; Economics Psychological aspects ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Wirtschaftswissenschaften ; Wirtschaftstheorie ; Glück ; Zufriedenheit ; Lebensqualität
    Abstract: What makes people happy in life? This crucial question has the potential to shake up economics. In recent years, dissatisfaction with the understanding of welfare in economics and new opportunities for empirical study of people's subjective well-being have spurred impressive and stimulating new research into the 'dismal' science, resulting in increased interest in the economics of happiness. Professor Frey and Professor Stutzer have selected contributions by leading scholars which offer a wide-ranging overview of recent developments. These include an exploration of the economic determinants of happiness, the importance of social capital and health for well-being and the new life satisfaction approach to valuing public goods. Work on utility misprediction and adaptation challenges the existing fundamentals of economics, and the role of happiness research in public policy is investigated from different perspectives
    Abstract: Bernard M.S. van Praag and Barbara E. Baarsma (2005), 'Using Happiness Surveys to Value Intangibles: The Case of Airport Noise', Economic Journal, 115 (500), January, 224-46 -- Simon Luechinger (2009), 'Valuing Air Quality Using the Life Satisfaction Approach', Economic Journal, 119 (536), March, 482-515 -- Daniel Kahneman and Richard H. Thaler (2006), 'Anomalies: Utility Maximization and Experienced Utility', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 20 (1), Winter, 221-34 -- Andrew E. Clark, Ed Diener, Yannis Georgellis and Richard E. Lucas (2008), 'Lags and Leads in Life Satisfaction: A Test of the Baseline Hypothesis', Economic Journal, 118 (529), June, F222-F243 -- Luis Rayo and Gary S. Becker (2007), 'Evolutionary Efficiency and Happiness', Journal of Political Economy, 115 (2), April, 302-37 -- Richard Layard (2006), 'Happiness and Public Policy: A Challenge to the Profession', Economic Journal, 116 (510), March, C24-C33 -- Bruno S. Frey and Alois Stutzer (2012), 'The Use of Happiness Research for Public Policy', Social Choice and Welfare, 38 (4), April, 659-74
    Abstract: Finkelstein, Amy, Erzo F.P. Luttmer and Matthew J. Notowidigdo (2013), 'What Good is Wealth without Health? The Effect of Health on the Marginal Utility of Consumption', forthcoming in the Journal of the European Economic Association. -- Frank, Robert H. (2004), 'How not to Buy Happiness', Daedalus, 133 (2), 69-79. -- Freeman, A. Myrick, III (2003), The Measurement of Environmental and Resource Values: Theory and Methods, Washington, DC: Resources for the Future. -- Frey, Bruno S. (2008), Happiness: A Revolution in Economics, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. -- Frey, Bruno S. and Matthias Benz (2008), 'Being Independent is a Great Thing: Subjective Evaluations of Self-Employment and Hierarchy', Economica, 75 (298), 362-83. -- Frey, Bruno S., Simon Luechinger and Alois Stutzer (2009), 'The Life Satisfaction Approach to the Value of Public Goods: The Case of Terrorism', Public Choice, 138 (3-4), 317-45. -- Frey, Bruno S., Simon Luechinger and Alois Stutzer (2010), 'The Life Satisfaction Approach to Environmental Valuation', Annual Review of Resource Economics, 2, 139-60. -- Frey, Bruno S. and Alois Stutzer (2002a), Happiness and Economics: How the Economy and Institutions Affect Well-Being, Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press. -- Frey, Bruno S. and Alois Stutzer (2012), 'Economic Consequences of Mispredicting Utility', Mimeo: University of Basel. -- Frijters, Paul, David W. Johnston and Michael A. Shields (2011), 'Life Satisfaction Dynamics with Quarterly Life Event Data', Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 113 (1), 190-211. -- Graham, Liam and Andrew Oswald (2010), 'Hedonic Capital, Adaptation and Resilience', Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 76 (2), 372-84. -- Green, Francis (2011), 'Unpacking the Misery Multiplier: How Employability Modifies the Impacts of Unemployment and Job Insecurity on Life Satisfaction and Mental Health', Journal of Health Economics, 30 (2), 265-76. -- Helliwell, John and Christopher Barrington-Leigh (2010), 'Measuring and Understanding Subjective Well-Being', Canadian Journal of Economics, 43 (3), 729-53. -- Helliwell, John F., Richard Layard and Jeffrey Sachs (eds) (2012), World Happiness Report, New York: The Earth Institute, Columbia University. -- Hsee, Christopher, Yuval Rottenstreich and Alois Stutzer (2012), 'Suboptimal Choices and the Need for Experienced Individual Well-Being in Economic Analysis', IZA Discussion Paper No. 6346, available at: ssrn.com/abstract=2010941. -- Ifcher, John and Homa Zarghamee (2011), 'Happiness and Time Preference: The Effect of Positive Affect in a Random-Assignment Experiment', American Economic Review, 101 (7), 3109-129. -- Kahneman, Daniel, Alan Krueger, David Schkade, Norbert Schwarz and Arthur Stone (2004), 'A Survey Method for Characterizing Daily Life Experience: The Day Reconstruction Method', Science, 306 (5702), 1776-80. -- Kahneman, Daniel and Robert Sugden (2005), 'Experienced Utility as a Standard of Policy Evaluation', Environmental and Resource Economics, 32 (1), 161-81. -- Kassenboehmer, Sonja C. and John P. Haisken-DeNew (2009), 'You're Fired! The Causal Negative Effect of Entry Unemployment on Life Satisfaction', Economic Journal, 119 (536), 448-62
    Abstract: Knabe, Andreas and Steffen Rätzel (2011), 'Scarring or Scaring? The Psychological Impact of Past Unemployment and Future Unemployment Risk', Economica, 78 (310), 283-93. -- Knabe, Andreas, Steffen Rätzel, Ronnie Schöb and Joachim Weimann (2010), 'Dissatisfied with Life but Having a Good Day: Time-Use and Well-Being of the Unemployed', Economic Journal, 120 (547), 867-89. -- Knight, John and Ramani Gunatilaka (2012), 'Income, Aspiration and the Hedonic Treadmill in a Poor Society', Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 82 (1), 67-81. -- Krueger, Alan B. (ed) (2009), Measuring the Subjective Well-Being of Nations: National Accounts of Time Use and Well-Being, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. -- Krueger, Alan B. and David A. Schkade (2008), 'The Reliability of Subjective Well-Being Measures', Journal of Public Economics, 92 (8-9), 1833-45. -- Layard, Richard (2005), Happiness: Lessons from a New Science, New York: Penguin. -- Layard, Richard, Stephen Nickell and Guy Mayraz (2008), 'The Marginal Utility of Income', Journal of Public Economics, 92 (8-9), 1846-57. -- Loewenstein, George, Ted O'Donoghue and Matthew Rabin (2003), 'Projection Bias in Predicting Future Utility', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 118 (4), 1209-48. -- Luechinger, Simon, Stephan Meier and Alois Stutzer (2010), 'Why Does Unemployment Hurt the Employed? Evidence from the Life Satisfaction Gap between the Public and the Private Sector', Journal of Human Resources, 45 (4), 998-1045. -- Luechinger, Simon and Paul A. Raschky (2009), 'Valuing Flood Disasters Using the Life Satisfaction Approach', Journal of Public Economics, 93 (3-4), 620-33. -- MacKerron, George and Susana Mourato (2009), 'Life Satisfaction and Air Quality in London', Ecological Economics, 68 (5), 1441-53. -- Meier, Stephan and Alois Stutzer (2008), 'Is Volunteering Rewarding in Itself?', Economica, 75 (297), 39-59. -- Oreopoulos, Philip and Kjell Salvanes (2011), 'Priceless: The Nonpecuniary Benefits of Schooling', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 25 (1), 159-84. -- Oswald, Andrew and Nattavudh Powdthavee (2008), 'Does Happiness Adapt? A Longitudinal Study of Disability with Implications for Economists and Judges', Journal of Public Economics, 92 (5-6), 1061-77. -- Oswald, Andrew and Steve Wu (2010), 'Objective Confirmation of Subjective Measures of Human Well-being: Evidence from the USA', Science, 327 (5965), 576-79. -- Pischke, Jorn-Steffen (2011), 'Money and Happiness: Evidence from the Industry Wage Structure', NBER Working Papers No. 17056, available at: ssrn.com/abstract=1841293. -- Powdthavee, Nattavudh (2008), 'Putting a Price Tag on Friends, Relatives, and Neighbours: Using Surveys of Life Satisfaction to Value Social Relationships', Journal of Socio-Economics, 37 (4), 1459-80. -- van Praag, Bernard M.S. and Ada Ferrer-i-Carbonell (2004), Happiness Quantified - A Satisfaction Calculus Approach, Oxford: Oxford University Press. -- Sarracino, Francesco (2010), 'Social Capital and Subjective Well-Being Trends: Comparing 11 Western European Countries', Journal of Socio- Economics, 39 (4), 482-517
    Abstract: Recommended readings (Machine generated): Alesina, Alberto, Rafael Di Tella and Robert MacCulloch (2004), 'Inequality and Happiness: Are Europeans and Americans Different?', Journal of Public Economics, 88, 2009-42. -- Ambrey, Christopher L. and Christopher M. Fleming (2011), 'Valuing Scenic Amenity Using Life Satisfaction Data', Ecological Economics, 72, 106-15. -- Baetschmann, Gregori, Kevin E. Staub and Rainer Winkelmann (2011), 'Consistent Estimation of the Fixed Effects Ordered Logit Model', IZA Discussion Paper No. 5443, available at: ssrn.com/abstract=1745718. -- Bartolini, Stefano (2012), 'Sociability Predicts Happiness in Nations: Evidence from Macro and Micro Data', forthcoming in Stefano Bartolini (ed), Policies for Happiness, Oxford: Oxford University Press. -- Booth, Philip (ed) (2012), ... and the Pursuit of Happiness: Wellbeing and the Role of Government, London: Institute of Economic Affairs. -- Bruni, Luigino and Pier Luigi Porta (eds) (2005), Economics and Happiness: Framing the Analysis, Oxford: Oxford University Press. -- Bruni, Luigino and Pier Luigi Porta (eds) (2007), Handbook on the Economics of Happiness, Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar. -- Carroll, Nick, Paul Frijters and Michael A. Shields (2009), 'Quantifying the Costs of Drought: New Evidence from Life Satisfaction Data', Journal of Population Economics, 22 (2), 445-61. -- Cattaneo, Matias D., Sebastian Galiani, Paul J. Gertler, Sebastian Martinez and Rocio Titiunik (2009), 'Housing, Health, and Happiness', American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 1 (1), 75-105. -- Clark, Andrew E. (2003), 'Unemployment as a Social Norm: Psychological Evidence from Panel Data', Journal of Labor Economics, 21 (2), 323-51. -- Clark, Andrew E. (2006), 'A Note on Unhappiness and Unemployment Duration', Applied Economics Quarterly, 52 (4), 291-308. -- Clark, Andrew, Yannis Georgellis and Peter Sanfey (2001), 'Scarring: The Psychological Impact of Past Unemployment', Economica, 68 (270), 221-41. -- Clark, Andrew and Claudia Senik (2010), 'Who Compares to Whom? The Anatomy of Income Comparisons in Europe', Economic Journal, 120 (544), 573-94. -- Diener, Ed and Micaela Y. Chan (2011), 'Happy People Live Longer: Subjective Well-Being Contributes to Health and Longevity', Applied Psychology: Health and Well-Being, 3 (1), 1-43. -- Diener, Ed, John F. Helliwell and Daniel Kahneman (2010), International Differences in Well-Being, New York: Oxford University Press. -- Di Tella, Rafael and Robert MacCulloch (2006), 'Some Uses of Happiness Data in Economics', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 20 (1), 25-46. -- Dolan, Paul and Robert Metcalfe (2008), 'Comparing Willingness-to-Pay and Subjective Well-Being in the Context of Non-Market Goods', Centre for Economic Performance Discussion Paper No. 0890, available at: cep.lse.ac.uk/pubs/download/dp0890.pdf. -- Dolan, Paul, Tessa Peasgood and Mathew White (2008), 'Do We Really Know What Makes Us Happy? A Review of the Economic Literature on the Factors Associated with Subjective Well-Being', Journal of Economic Psychology, 29 (1), 94-122. -- Easterlin, Richard A. (ed) (2002), Happiness in Economics, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. -- Ferrer-i-Carbonell, Ada and Paul Frijters (2004), 'How Important is Methodology for the Estimates of the Determinants of Happiness?', Economic Journal, 114 (497), 641-59
    Abstract: Stiglitz, Joseph E. et al. (2009), 'Report by the Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress', available at: www.stiglitz-sen-fitoussi.fr. -- Stone, Arthur, Saul Shiffman and Marten DeVries (1999), 'Ecological Momentary Assessment', in Daniel Kahneman, Ed Diener and Norbert Schwarz (eds), Well-Being: The Foundations of Hedonic Psychology, New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation, 26-39. -- Stutzer, Alois and Bruno S. Frey (2008), 'Stress that Doesn't Pay: The Commuting Paradox', Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 110 (2), 339-66. -- Stutzer, Alois and Bruno S. Frey (2010), 'Recent Advances in the Economics of Individual Subjective Well-Being', Social Research: An International Quarterly, 77 (2), 679-714. -- Stutzer, Alois and Rafael Lalive (2004), 'The Role of Social Work Norms in Job Searching and Subjective Well-Being', Journal of the European Economic Association, 2 (4), 696-719. -- Welsch, Heinz (2006), 'Environment and Happiness: Valuation of Air Pollution Using Life Satisfaction Data', Ecological Economics, 58 (4), 801-13. -- Wolfers, Justin (2003), 'Is Business Cycle Volatility Costly? Evidence from Surveys of Subjective Well-Being', International Finance, 6 (1), 1-26. -- Bruno S. Frey and Alois Stutzer (2002), 'What Can Economists Learn from Happiness Research?', Journal of Economic Literature, 40 (2), June, 402-35 -- Daniel Kahneman and Alan B. Krueger (2006), 'Developments in the Measurement of Subjective Well-Being', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 20 (1), Winter, 3-24 -- Mark Kelman (2005), 'Hedonic Psychology and the Ambiguities of "Welfare', Philosophy and Public Affairs, 33 (4), September, 391-412 -- Andrew E. Clark, Paul Frijters and Michael A. Shields (2008), 'Relative Income, Happiness, and Utility: An Explanation for the Easterlin Paradox and Other Puzzles', Journal of Economic Literature, 46 (1), March, 95-144 -- Betsey Stevenson and Justin Wolfers (2008), 'Economic Growth and Subjective Well-Being: Reassessing the Easterlin Paradox', Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 39 (1), Spring, 1-87 -- Richard A. Easterlin, Laura Angelescu McVey, Malgorzata Switek, Onnicha Sawangfa and Jacqueline Smith Zweig (2010), 'The Happiness-Income Paradox Revisited', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 107 (52), December, 22463-68 -- Erzo F.P. Luttmer (2005), 'Neighbors as Negatives: Relative Earnings and Well-Being', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 120 (3), August, 963-1002 -- Alois Stutzer (2004), 'The Role of Income Aspirations in Individual Happiness', Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 54 (1), May, 89-109 -- Rafael Di Tella, Robert J. MacCulloch and Andrew J. Oswald (2003), 'The Macroeconomics of Happiness', Review of Economics and Statistics, 85 (4), November, 809-27 -- John F. Helliwell and Robert D. Putnam (2004), 'The Social Context of Well-Being', Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Series B. Biological Sciences, 359 (1449), September, 1435-46 -- Leonardo Becchetti, Alessandra Pelloni and Fiammetta Rossetti (2008), 'Relational Goods, Sociability, and Happiness', Kyklos, 61 (3), August, 343-63 -- Angus Deaton (2008), 'Income, Health, and Well-Being Around the World: Evidence from the Gallup World Poll', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 22 (2), Spring, 53-72
    Note: The recommended readings are available in the print version, or may be available via the link to your library's holdings
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Pub. Ltd
    ISBN: 9781782548225
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (640 p) , ill
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: Elgar original reference
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Handbook of economic organization
    DDC: 338.6
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Organisation ; Organisationstheorie ; Unternehmensorganisation ; Wirtschaftswissenschaft ; Theorie ; Industrial organization (Economic theory) ; Electronic books ; Industrial organization (Economic theory) ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Entrepreneurship ; Strategisches Management ; Organisationsstruktur ; Organisationstheorie ; Organisationstheorie ; Wirtschaftswissenschaften
    Abstract: pt. I. The micro-foundations of economic organization : extending behavioral assumptions on knowledge, interest, and rationality -- pt. II. The constitution of economic organization between interacting and contracting -- pt. III. The shaping of economic organization between design and evolution -- pt. IV. Human resources and economic organization between assets and actors -- pt. V. Technical assets and economic organization between determinants and opportunities -- pt. VI. Forms of economic organization between discrete alternatives and combinative configurations -- pt. VII. Conclusions.
    Abstract: This excellent volume bri ...
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Pub. Ltd
    ISBN: 9781784710293
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (1 v) , cm
    Series Statement: Elgar research reviews in economics
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Mathematics and modern economics
    RVK:
    Keywords: Wirtschaftswissenschaft ; Mathematik ; Ökonometrie ; Economics, Mathematical ; Electronic books ; Wirtschaftswissenschaften ; Mathematik ; Ökonometrie
    Abstract: The appropriate role of mathematics in economics has been controversial for two hundred years, and has been a matter of ongoing debate as economics became more mathematical after the Second World War. Controversy has been heightened after extensive criticisms of models used for analysis, prediction and risk assessment prior to the great financial crash of 2008. In this topical collection, Professor Hodgson brings together the seminal classic and recent essays published since 1945 on the role of mathematics in economics, by leading authors including six Nobel Laureates, and from a variety of perspectives
    Abstract: Colander, David C. (2005) 'The Making of an Economist Redux', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 19(1), Winter, 175-98. -- Cook, Simon J. (2009), The Intellectual Foundations of Alfred Marshall's Economic Science: A Rounded Globe of Knowledge, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. -- Cornwall, John and Wendy Cornwall (2001), Capitalist Development in the Twentieth Century: An Evolutionary-Keynesian Analysis, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. -- Cournot, Augustin (1838), Recherches sur les principes mathématiques de la théorie des richesses, Paris: Hachette. -- Davis, John B. (2006), 'The Turn in Economics: Neoclassical Dominance to Mainstream Pluralism?' Journal of Institutional Economics, 2(1), April, 1-20. -- Day, Richard H. (1983), 'The Emergence of Chaos from Classical Economic Growth', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 98, 201-12. -- Day, Richard H. and Wayne Shafer, (1985), 'Keynesian Chaos', Journal of Macroeconomics, 7, 277-95. -- Edgeworth, Francis Y. (1881), Mathematical Psychics: An Essay on the Application of Mathematics to the Moral Sciences, London: Kegan Paul. -- Ekelund, Robert B. Jr. and Robert F. Hébert, (2002), 'The Origins of Neoclassical Economics', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 16(3), Summer, 197-215. -- Fisher, Irving (1892), Mathematical Investigations in the Theory of Value and Prices, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. -- Fisher, Irving (1898), 'Cournot and Mathematical Economics', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 12(2), January, 119-38. -- Frantz, Roger S. (2005), Two Minds: Intuition and Analysis in the History of Economic Thought, Berlin: Springer. -- Friedman, Milton (1953), 'The Methodology of Positive Economics', in M. Friedman, Essays in Positive Economics, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 3-43. -- Goodwin, Richard M. (1972), 'A Growth Cycle', in E. K. Hunt, and Jesse G. Schwartz, (eds) (1972), A Critique of Economic Theory, Harmondsworth: Penguin, 442-9. -- Goodwin, Richard M. (1990), Chaotic Economic Dynamics, Oxford: Oxford University Press. -- Grandmont, Jean-Michel (1986), 'Stabilizing Competitive Business Cycles', Journal of Economic Theory, 40(1), October, 57-76. -- Hands, D. Wade (2001), Reflection Without Rules: Economic Methodology and Contemporary Science Theory, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. -- Hart, Oliver D. and John Moore (1990) 'Property Rights and the Nature of the Firm', Journal of Political Economy, 98(6), December, 1119-58. -- Hayek, Friedrich A. (1945), 'The Ue of Knowledge in Society', American Economic Review, 35(4), September, 519-30
    Abstract: Hodgson, Geoffrey M. (1993a), 'The Mecca of Alfred Marshall', Economic Journal, 103(2), March, 406-15. -- Hodgson, Geoffrey M. (1993b), Economics and Evolution: Bringing Life Back Into Economics, Cambridge, UK and Ann Arbor, MI: Polity Press and University of Michigan Press. -- Hodgson, Geoffrey M. (1997), 'The Fate of the Cambridge Capital Controversy', in Philip Arestis and Malcolm C. Sawyer (eds) Capital Controversy, Post Keynesian Economics and the History of Economic Theory: Essays in Honour of Geoff Harcourt, London and New York: Routledge, 95-110. -- Hodgson, Geoffrey M. (1999), Evolution and Institutions: On Evolutionary Economics and the Evolution of Economics, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. -- Hodgson, Geoffrey M. (2001), How Economics Forgot History: The Problem of Historical Specificity in Social Science, London and New York: Routledge. -- Hodgson, Geoffrey M. (2004), The Evolution of Institutional Economics: Agency, Structure and Darwinism in American Institutionalism, London and New York: Routledge. -- Hodgson, Geoffrey M. (2011), 'The Eclipse of the Uncertainty Concept in Mainstream Economics', Journal of Economic Issues, 45(1), March, 159-75. -- Hodgson, Geoffrey M. and Kainan Huang (2012), 'Evolutionary Game Theory and Evolutionary Economics: Are they Different Species?' Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 22, 345-66. -- Hodgson, Geoffrey M. and Thorbjørn Knudsen (2004), 'The Complex Evolution of a Simple Traffic Convention: The Functions and Implications of Habit', Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 54(1), 19-47. -- Hodgson, Geoffrey M. and Thorbjørn Knudsen (2006), 'Balancing Inertia, Innovation, and Imitation in Complex Environments', Journal of Economic Issues, 40(2), June, 287-95. -- Hutchison, Terence W. (2000), On the Methodology of Economics and the Formalist Revolution, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. -- Jaffé, William (1976), 'Menger, Jevons and Walras De-Homogenized', Economic Inquiry, 14(1), January, 511-24. -- Jevons, William Stanley (1871), The Theory of Political Economy, 1st ednn. London: Macmillan. -- Kauffman, Stuart A. (1995), At Home in the Universe: The Search for Laws of Self-Organization and Complexity, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. -- Keynes, John Maynard (1936), The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, London: Macmillan. -- Keynes, John Maynard (1939), 'Professor Tinbergen's Method', Economic Journal, 49(4), September, 558-68. -- Keynes, John Maynard (1940), 'On a Method of Statistical Business Cycle Research: A Comment', Economic Journal, 50(1), March, 154-6. -- Keynes, John Maynard (1972), The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, Vol. X, Essays in Biography, London: Macmillan. -- Keynes, John Maynard (1973), The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, Vol. XIV, The General Theory and After, Part II: Defence and Development, London: Macmillan
    Abstract: King, John E. (1996) An Alternative Macroeconomic Theory: The Kaleckiam Model and Post-Keynesian Economics, Boston, MA: Kluwer. -- Kirman, Alan P. (1983), 'Communication in Markets: A Suggested Approach', Economics Letters, 12, 101-8. -- Kirman, Alan P. (1989), 'The Intrinsic Limits of Modern Economic Theory: The Emperor Has No Clothes', Economic Journal (Conference Papers), 99, 126-139. -- Kirman, Alan P. (1987), 'Graph Theory' in John Eatwell, Murray Milgate and Peter Newman (eds) (1987), The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, London: Macmillan, 2, 558-9. -- Knight, Frank H. (1935), The Ethics of Competition and Other Essays, New York: Harper. -- Krugman, Paul R. (2009), 'How Did Economists Get It So Wrong?' New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/06/magazine/06Economic-t.html, 2 September. -- Kurz, Heinz D. and Neri Salvadori, (1995), Theory of Production: A Long-Period Analysis, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. -- Lachmann, Ludwig M. (1977), Capital, Expectations and the Market Process, edited with an introduction by W. E. Grinder, KansasCity: Sheed Andrews and McMeel. -- Lawson, Tony (1997), Economics and Reality, London and New York: Routledge. -- Lawson, Tony (2006), 'The Nature of Heterodox Economics', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 30(4), July, 483-505. -- Leijonhufvud, Axel (1968), On Keynesian Economics and the Economics of Keynes: A Study in Monetary Theory, London: Oxford University Press. -- Leontief, Wassily W. (1982), Letter in Science, No. 217, 9 July, pp. 104, 107. -- Loasby, Brian J. (1976), Choice, Complexity and Ignorance: An Enquiry into Economic Theory and the Practice of Decision Making, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. -- Magnus, Jan R. and Mary S. Morgan (eds) (1999), Methodology and Tacit Knowledge: Two Experiments in Econometrics, New York and Chichester: John Wiley. -- Mäki, Uskali (2003), '"The Methodology of Positive Economics" (1953) Does not Give us the Methodology of Positive Economics', Journal of Economic Methodology, 10(4), December, 495-505. -- Malthus, Thomas Robert (1836), Principles of Political Economy: Considered with a View to Their Practical Application, 2nd edn., London: Pickering. -- Marshall, Alfred (1885), 'The Present Position of Economics', in Arthur C. Pigou (ed.) (1925), Memorials of Alfred Marshall, London: Macmillan), 152-74. -- Marshall, Alfred (1920), Principles of Economics: An Introductory Volume, 8th edn., London: Macmillan. -- McCloskey, Deirdre N. (1994), Knowledge and Persuasion in Economics, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press
    Abstract: McCombie, John S. L. (1981), 'What Still Remains of Kaldor's Laws?', Economic Journal, 91(1), March, 206-16. -- Menger, Carl (1871), Grundsätze der Volkwirtschaftslehre, 1st ednn. (Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr). Published in English in 1981 as Principles of Economics, New York: New York University Press. -- Menger, Carl (1883), Untersuchungen über die Methode der Sozialwissenschaften und der politischen Ökonomie insbesondere (Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr). Published in English in 1985 as Investigations into the Method of the Social Sciences with Special Reference to Economics,, New York: New York University Press. -- Mirowski, Philip (1989), More Heat Than Light: Economics as Social Physics, Physics as Nature's Economics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. -- Mirowski, Philip (1991a), 'Postmodernism and the Social Theory of Value', Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 13(4), Summer, 565-82. -- Mirowski, Philip (2002), Machine Dreams: Economics Becomes a Cyborg Science, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. -- Mirowski, Philip (forthcoming) 'The Unreasonable Efficacy of Mathematics in Modern Economics', in Dov M. Gabbay, Paul Thagard and John Woods (general eds) and Uskali Mäki (volume ed.) (forthcoming) Handbook of the Philosophy of Science. Volume 13: Philosophy of Economics, Amsterdam: Elsevier. -- Mises, Ludwig von (1949), Human Action: A Treatise on Economics, 1st ednn., London and New Haven: William Hodge and Yale University Press. -- Mitchell, Wesley C. (1927), Business Cycles: The Problem and its Setting, New York: National Bureau of Economic Research. -- Morgan, Mary S. (1990), The History of Econometric Ideas, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. -- Nelson, Richard R. and Sidney G. Winter, (1982), An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. -- Pareto, Vilfredo (1897), 'The New Theories of Economics', Journal of Political Economy, 5(4), September, 485-502. -- Pessali, Huascar F. (2006), 'The Rhetoric of Oliver Williamson's Transaction Cost Economics', Journal of Institutional Economics, 2(1), April, 45-65. -- Pigou, Arthur C. (ed.) (1925), Memorials of Alfred Marshall, London: Macmillan. -- Potts, Jason (2000), The New Evolutionary Microeconomics: Complexity, Competence and Adaptive Behaviour, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. -- Quine, Willard van Orman (1951), 'Two Dogmas of Empiricism', Philosophical Review, 60(1), January, 20-43. Reprinted in Willard van Orman Quine (1953), From a Logical Point of View, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 721. -- Radzicki, Michael J. (1990), 'Institutional Dynamics, Deterministic Chaos, and Self-Organizing Systems', Journal of Economic Issues, 24(1), March, 57-102. -- Radzicki, Michael J. (2003), 'Mr. Hamilton, Mr. Forrester, and a Foundation for Evolutionary Economics', Journal of Economic Issues, 37(1), March, 133-73. -- Raffaelli, Tiziano (2003), Marshall's Evolutionary Economics, London and New York: Routledge
    Abstract: Peter E. Earl (2010), 'Economics Fit for the Queen: A Pessimistic Assessment of its Prospects', Prometheus, 28 (3), September, 209-25 -- Geoffrey Hodgson (2011), 'Reforming Economics after the Financial Crisis', Global Policy, 2 (2), May, 190-95
    Abstract: Recommended readings (Machine generated): Acemoglu, Daron, Simon Johnson and James A. Robinson (2002), 'Reversal of Fortune: Geography and Institutions in the Making of the Modern Income Distribution', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 117(4), November, 1231-94. -- Aoki, Masahiko (1990), 'Towards an Economic Model of the Japanese Firm', Journal of Economic Literature, 26(1), March, 1-27. -- Aspromourgos, Tony (2000), 'New Light on the Economics of William Petty (1623-1687): Some Findings From Previously Undisclosed Manuscripts', Contributions to Political Economy, 19, 53-70. -- Backhouse, Roger E. (1998), 'The Transformation of U.S. Economics, 1920-1960, Viewed through a Survey of Journal Articles', in Mary S. Morgan, and Malcolm H. Rutherford (eds) (1998), The Transformation of American Economics: From Interwar Pluralism to Postwar Neoclassicism, Annual Supplement to Volume 30 of History of Political Economy, Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 85-107. -- Barnett, William A., John Geweke and Karl Shell (eds) (1989), Economic Complexity: Chaos, Sunspots, Bubbles and Nonlinearity, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. -- Baumol, William J. and Jess Benhabib (1989), 'Chaos, Significance, Mechanism, and Economic Applications', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 3(1), Winter, 77-105. -- Baumol, William J. and Stephen M. Goldfield, (eds) (1968), Precursors in Mathematical Economics: An Anthology, London: London School of Economics. -- Baumol, William J. and Richard E. Quandt (1985), 'Chaos Models and Their Implications for Forecasting', Eastern Economic Journal, 11(1), January-March, 3-15. -- Benacerraf, Paul and Hilary Putnam (eds) (1984), Philosophy of Mathematics: Selected Readings, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. -- Benhabib, Jess (ed.) (1992), Cycles and Chaos in Economic Equilibrium, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. -- Blaug, Mark (1999), 'The Formalist Revolution or What Happened to Orthodox Economics After World War II?', in Roger E. Backhouse, and John Creedy (eds) (1999), From Classical Economics to the Theory of the Firm: Essays in Honour of D. P. O'Brien, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 257-80. -- Boland, Lawrence A. (1989), The Methodology of Economic Model Building: Methodology after Samuelson, London and New York: Routledge. -- Bowen, Howard R. (1953), 'Graduate Education in Economics', American Economic Review Supplement, Graduate Education in Economics, 43(4), Part 2, September, pp. ii-xv, 1-223. -- Brems, Hans (1975), 'Marshall on Mathematics', Journal of Law and Economics, 18(2), October, 583-5. -- Brock, William A., David A. Hsieh and Blake LeBaron (1991), Nonlinear Dynamics, Chaos, and Instability: Statistical Theory and Economic Evidence, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. -- Buchanan, James M. (1969), 'Is Economics the Science of Choice?', in Erich Streissler (ed.) (1969), Roads to Freedom: Essays in Honour of Friedrich A. von Hayek, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 47-64. -- Bullard, James and Alison Butler (1993), 'Nonlinearity and Chaos in Economic Models: Implications for Policy Decisions', Economic Journal, 103(4), July, 849-67. -- Bush, Paul Dale (1983), 'An Exploration of the Structural Characteristics of a Veblen-Ayres-Foster Defined Institutional Domain', Journal of Economic Issues, 17(1), March, 35-66. -- Chatterjee, Amah and Bikas K. Chakrabati (eds) (2007), Econophysics of Markets and Business Networks, Berlin: Springer
    Abstract: Rizvi, S. Abu Turab (1994), 'The Microfoundations Project in General Equilibrium Theory', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 18(4), August, 357-77. -- Robinson, Joan (1975), 'What has Become of the Keynesian Revolution?', in Milo Keynes (ed.) Essays on John Maynard Keynes, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 123-31. -- Rodrik, Dani and Francesco Trebbi (2004), 'Institutions Rule: The Primacy of Institutions Over Geography and Integration in Economic Development', Journal of Economic Growth, 9, 131-65. -- Rosenberg, Alexander (1992), Economics - Mathematical Politics or Science of Diminishing Returns?, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. -- Rosser, J. Barkley, Jr (1991), From Catastrophe to Chaos: A General Theory of Economic Discontinuities, Dordrecht: Kluwer. -- Rutherford, Malcolm H. (2011), The Institutionalist Movement in American Economics, 1918-1947: Science and Social Control, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. -- Samuelson, Paul A. (1947), Foundations of Economic Analysis, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. -- Schefold, Bertram (1989), Mr Sraffa on Joint Production and other Essays, London: Unwin and Hyman. -- Shackle, George L. S. (1955), Uncertainty in Economics, London: Cambridge University Press. -- Shackle, George L. S. (1976), 'Time and Choice', Proceedings of the British Academy, 66, 309-29. -- Reprinted in George L. S. Shackle, (1990), Time, Expectations and Uncertainty in Economics: Selected Essays of G. L. S. Shackle, (ed.) J. L. Ford, Aldershot: Edward Elgar. -- Silva, Sandra Tavares and Aurora A. C. Teixeira, (2009), 'On the Divergence of Evolutionary Research Paths in the Past 50 years: A Comprehensive Bibliometric Account', Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 19(5), October, 605-42. -- Simon, Herbert A. (1987), 'Making Management Decisions: The Role of Intutition and Emotion', Academy of Management Execitive, 1(11), 57-64. -- Sraffa, Piero (1960), Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities: Prelude to a Critique of Economic Theory, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. -- Steedman, Ian (1977), Marx After Sraffa, London: NLB. -- Stigler, George J., Stephen M. Stigler and Claire Friedland, (1995), 'The Journals of Economics', Journal of Political Economy, 105(2), 331-59. -- Thomas, Brinley (1991), 'Alfred Marshall on Economic Biology', Review of Political Economy, 3(1), January, 1-14. -- Tinbergen, Jan (1939), Statistical Testing of Business-Cycle Theories, 2 vols, Geneva: League of Nations. -- Tinbergen, Jan (1940a), 'Econometric Business Cycle Research', Review of Economic Studies, 7(2), February, 73-90
    Abstract: Roger E. Backhouse (1998), 'If Mathematics is Informal, Then Perhaps We Should Accept that Economics Must be Informal Too', Economic Journal, 108 (451), November, 1848-58 -- Victoria Chick (1998), 'On Knowing One's Place: The Role of Formalism in Economics', Economic Journal, 108 (451), November, 1859-69 -- Robert Sugden (2000), 'Credible Worlds: The Status of Theoretical Models in Economics', Journal of Economic Methodology, 7 (1), 1-31 -- James M. Buchanan (2001), 'Game Theory, Mathematics, and Economics', Journal of Economic Methodology, 8 (1), 27-32 -- Victoria Chick and Sheila C. Dow (2001), 'Formalism, Logic and Reality: A Keynesian Analysis', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 25 (6), 705-21 -- Ken Dennis (2002), 'Nominalising the Numeric: An Alternative to Mathematical Reduction in Economics', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 26 (1), January, 63-80 -- Tony Lawson (2004), 'Reorienting Economics: On Heterodox Economics, Themata and the Use of Mathematics in Economics', Journal of Economic Methodology, 11 (3), September, 329-40 -- Uskali Mäki (2005), 'Models are Experiments, Experiments are Models', Journal of Economic Methodology, 12 (2), June, 303-15 -- K. Vela Velupillai (2005), 'The Unreasonable Ineffectiveness of Mathematics in Economics', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 29 (6), November, 849-72 -- D. Wade Hands (2007), '2006 HES Presidential Address: A Tale of Two Mainstreams: Economics and Philosophy of Natural Science in the Mid-Twentieth Century', Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 29 (1), March, 1-13 -- Geoffrey M. Hodgson (2006), 'The Problem of Formalism in Economics', in Economics in the Shadows of Darwin and Marx: Essays on Institutional and Evolutionary Themes, Chapter 7, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 116-34 -- Simon Mohun and Roberto Veneziani (2010), 'Reorienting Economics?', Philosophy of the Social Sciences, XX (X), 1-20 and later, March (2012), 42, 126-45, doi: 10.1177/0048393110376218 506 -- David Colander, Hans Föllmer, Armin Haas, Michael Goldberg, Katarina Juselius, Alan Kirman, Thomas Lux and Brigitte Sloth (2008), 'The Financial Crisis and the Systemic Failure of Academic Economics', Kiel Working Paper, 1489, 1-17 -- Tony Lawson (2009), 'The Current Economic Crisis: Its Nature and the Course of Academic Economics', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 33 (4), 759-77 -- Timothy Besley and Peter Hennessy (2009), 'The Global Financial Crisis - Why Didn't Anybody Notice?', British Academy Review, 14, 8-10 -- Sheila C. Dow, Peter E. Earl, John Foster, Geoffrey C. Harcourt, Geoffrey M. Hodgson, J. Stanley Metcalfe, Paul Ormerod, Bridget Rosewell, Malcolm C. Sawyer and Andrew Tylecote (2009), 'Letter to the Queen, 10 August', 1-3 -- Tony Lawson (2009), 'Contemporary Economics and the Crisis', Real-World Economics Review, 50, 122-31 -- David Colander, Hans Foellmer, Armin Haas, Alan Kirman, Katarina Juselius, Brigitte Sloth and Thomas Lux (2009) 'How Should the Collapse of the World Financial System Affect Economics?', Real-World Economics Review, 50, 118-21 -- Philip Mirowski (2010), 'The Great Mortification: Economists' Responses to the Crisis of 2007-(and counting)', Hedgehog Review, 12 (2), Summer, 28-41
    Abstract: Stephen Enke (1955), 'More on the Misuse of Mathematics in Economics: A Rejoinder', Review of Economics and Statistics, XXXVII (2), May, 131-3 -- Wassily Leontief (1971), 'Theoretical Assumptions and Nonobserved Facts', American Economic Review, 61 (1), March, 1-7 -- Alan Coddington (1975), 'Creaking Semaphore and Beyond: A Consideration of Shackle's "Epistemics and Economics"', British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 26 (2), June, 151-63 -- Alexander Rosenberg (1975), 'The Nomological Character of Microeconomics', Theory and Decision, 6 (1), 1-26 -- Herbert G. Grubel and Lawrence A. Boland (1986), 'On the Efficient Use of Mathematics in Economics: Some Theory, Facts and Results of an Opinion Survey', Kyklos, 39 (3), 419-42 -- Gerard Debreu (1986), 'Theoretic Models: Mathematical Form and Economic Content', Econometrica, 54 (6), November, 1259-70 -- Herbert A. Simon (1986), 'The Failure of Armchair Economics [Interview]', Challenge, 29 (5), November-December, 18-25 -- Gerard Debreu (1991), 'The Mathematization of Economic Theory', American Economic Review, 81 (1), March, 1-7 -- Anne O. Krueger (1991), 'Report of the Commission on Graduate Education in Economics', Journal of Economic Literature, XXIX (3), September, 1035-53 -- Alan S. Blinder (1990), 'Discussion', American Economic Review, 80 (2), May, 445 -- Frank Hahn (1991), 'The Next Hundred Years', Economic Journal, 101 (404), January, 47-50 -- Donald N. McCloskey (1991), 'Economics Science: A Search Through the Hyperspace of Assumptions?', Methodus, 3 (1), June, 6-16 -- Philip Mirowski (1991), 'The When, the How and the Why of Mathematical Expression in the History of Economic Analysis', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 5 (1), Winter, 145-57 -- E. Roy Weintraub and Philip Mirowski (1994), 'The Pure and the Applied: Bourbakism Comes to Mathematical Economics', Science in Context, 7 (2), Summer, 245-72 -- Munir Quddus and Salim Rashid (1994), 'The Overuse of Mathematics in Economics: Nobel Resistance', Eastern Economic Journal, 20 (3), Summer, 251-65 -- Robert W. Clower (1995), 'Axiomatics in Economics', Southern Economic Journal, 62 (2), October, 307-19 -- Mark Blaug (1997), 'Ugly Currents in Modern Economics', Policy Options, 18 (17), September, 3-8 -- Peter J. Boettke (1997), 'Where Did Economics Go Wrong? Modern Economics as a Flight from Reality', Critical Review, 11 (1), Winter, 11-64 -- Paul Krugman (1998), 'Two Cheers for Formalism', Economic Journal, 108 (451), November, 1829-36
    Abstract: Tinbergen, Jan (1940b), 'On a Method of Statistical Business Cycle Research', Economic Journal, 50(1), No. 197, March, 141-154. -- Urmston, J. O. (1989), 'Deduction', in J. O. Urmston and Jonathan Rée (eds) (1989) The Concise Encyclopedia of Western Philosophy and Philosophers, London: Unwin Hyman, p. 70. -- Veblen, Thorstein B. (1900), 'The Preconceptions of Economic Science: III', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 14(2), February, 240-69. -- Veblen, Thorstein B. (1908), 'The Evolution of the Scientific Point of View', University of California Chronicle, 10(4), October, 395-416. -- Velupillai, Kumaraswamy (1996), 'The Computable Alternative in the Formalization of Economics: A Counterfactual Essay', Kyklos, 49, Fasc. 3, 251-72. -- Velupillai, Kumaraswamy (2000), Computable Economics, Oxford: Oxford University Press. -- Velupillai, Kumaraswamy (2005), 'The Unreasonable Ineffectiveness of Mathematics in Economics', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 29(6), November, 849-72. -- Walras, Léon (1874), Éléments d'économie politique pure, ou théorie de la richesse sociale, Lausanne: Rouge. -- Ward, Benjamin (1972), What's Wrong With Economics?, London: Macmillan. -- Weintraub, E. Roy (2002), How Economics Became a Mathematical Science, Durham, NC: Duke University Press. -- Whitaker, John K. (ed.) (1996), The Correspondence of Alfred Marshall, 3 vols, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. -- Wilber, Charles K. and Robert S. Harrison (1978), 'The Methodological Basis of Institutional Economics: Pattern Model, Storytelling, and Holism', Journal of Economic Issues, 12(1), March, 61-89. -- Wilson, Matthew C. (2005), 'Institutionalism, Critical Realism and the Critique of Mainstream Economics', Journal of Institutional Economics, 1(2), December, 217-31. -- Mark Blaug (2003), 'The Formalist Revolution of the 1950s', in Warren J. Samuels, Jeff E. Biddle and John B. Davis (eds), A Companion to the History of Economic Thought, Chapter 25, Malden, MA and Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing, 395-410 -- John M. Clark (1947), 'Mathematical Economists and Others: A Plea for Communicability', Econometrica, 15 (2), April, 75-8 -- Kenneth E. Boulding (1948), 'Samuelson's Foundations: The Role of Mathematics in Economics', Journal of Political Economy, LVI (3), June, 187-99 -- Morris A. Copeland (1951), 'Institutional Economics and Model Analysis', American Economic Review, 41 (2), May, 56-65 -- David Novick (1954), 'Mathematics: Logic, Quantity, and Method', Review of Economics and Statistics, XXXVI (4), November, 357-8 -- Paul A. Samuelson (1954), 'Some Psychological Aspects of Mathematics and Economics', Review of Economics and Statistics, XXXVI (4), November, 380-86
    Note: The recommended readings are available in the print version, or may be available via the link to your library's holdings
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