New Economics and Its History

Front Cover
John Bryan Davis
Duke University Press, 1997 - Business & Economics - 328 pages
The history of economic thought has traditionally focused on the work of individuals no longer living. Recently, however, historians have begun to use their tools of analysis on the work of contemporary economists. New Economics and Its Writing compiles evidence of this shift, with thirteen essays by scholars interested in catalyzing conversation between contemporary economists and historians of economics.
This new focus requires new methods of analysis--historiographic strategies involving far greater archival resources, for instance, and often nontraditional resources, such as electronic records. Essays collected here address these changes and examine how this new emphasis on the work of living economists can and will entail interaction between the producer of theory and the historian, complicating the latter's role. Chapters discuss topics such as the emergence of subdisciplines in economics, social-contextual perspectives on the writing of economics, the dynamics of idea development, and the recent incursion of noneconomic thinking--such as engineering methods and mathematical models--into economics.
New Economics and Its Writing shows that attention to recent, ongoing economics from historians of economics has the potential to revitalize and transform the history of economics as an area of investigation.

This volume is the 1997 Annual Supplement to the journal History of Political Economy. All 1997 subscribers will receive a copy of this book as part of their annual subscription.

Contributors. Timothy L. Alborn, Marcel Boumans, Joshua Cohen, John B. Davis, Ross B. Emmett, Paul Harrison, Daniel M. Hausman, Mary L. Hirschfeld, S. Todd Lowry, Steven G. Medema, Philip Mirowski, Philippe Mongin, S. Abu Turab Rizvi, Esther-Mirjam Sent


 

Contents

Introduction
1
Enginering Dynamic Economics
41
Lucas and Artificial Worlds
63
A Historical Perspective on the Common Methodological Heritage
93
What Law and Economics Tells
122
Beyond a Sociological Critique
143
The Evolution of Financial
172
SocialContextual Perspectives on How Economists Reason
189
The Balance Sheet in LateVictorian
212
What Is Truth in Capital Theory? Five Stories Relevant to
231
FullCost Pricing versus
255
Responses to Arbitrariness in Contemporary Economics
273
A Pickeringian View
289
Contributors
309
143
313
Copyright

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