The Death of Economics"Important and ingenious . . . ought to be read by every educated person." —The Spectator. Renowned British economist Paul Ormerod explodes current economic theory to offer a radical new framework for understanding how human societies and economies really operate. His bold and impassioned arguments about how and why economics should be recast to reflect the current ills of Western society —including unemployment, crime, and poverty —are both persuasive and controversial. Integrating ideas from biology, physics, artificial intelligence, and the behavioral sciences, Ormerod's groundbreaking approach is sure to have far-reaching repercussions. "A clear, concise, and yet sophisticated history of economic thought that should be required reading for Economics 101 courses. The fundamental challenge is to view the economy more as an organism than a machine and place it in its larger political, social, and moral context." —The Washington Post "A vigorous, informed, and thoughtful critique of the dismal science." —Kirkus Reviews. "Crucial reading for the concerned citizen, which ought to mean all of us. . . . This book is very timely indeed." —The Observer "Economics has some battles to fight. . . . Unless economists improve their ability to analyze and prescribe in an intelligent way, and to provide a modicum of accuracy in their forecasts, the twentieth-century pseudoscience of economics will become a twenty-first-century museum piece." —Sunday Times (London). |
From inside the book
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Paul Ormerod. power of the attractor point - in other words , the tendency of the data to move back into cycles around the attractor from points which might be quite far away . A strong attractor will pull the data back towards it even ...
... attractor point for unemployment which is starting to emerge is close to 20 per cent . - - - In Britain , a strong and stable attractor existed in the 1960s and early 1970s indeed , back into the 1950s as well around a low level of ...
... attractor point will have its own particular characteristics . Economies do not follow the Platonic ideal of perfect ellipses around any given attractor point , so that it may be possible to make improvements to the performance of an ...
Contents
Economics in Crisis | 3 |
Measuring Prosperity | 22 |
Roots of Economic Orthodoxy | 38 |
Copyright | |
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