My argument in this book is rather straightforward. I shall argue that every neoclassical research program is designed (1) to be consistent with acceptable ways of dealing with the Problem of Induction, and (2) to provide a methodological individualist explanation of economic behavior of the economy, that is, one which is based on the methodological prescription that allows only individuals to be posited as the locus of decision-making. With this in mind, I shall argue that neoclassical economists have thereby made their research program an impossible task because the Problem of Induction cannot, and need not, be solved. They compound this difficulty with psychologism, that is, by erroneously identifying individuals with psychological state...
Neoclassical Economics assumes that economic agents are independent and optimizing. The ac...
This is Chapter 4 from "Social Economics: An Alternative Theory" (St. Martin's Press, 1991). This c...
Orthodox neoclassical economists as well cannot make sense of economics, but they too can make sense...
This book offers a critical examination of the neoclassical model which typically fails to include a...
In the last few years a growing discontent with the neoclassical theoretical framework has led to th...
Uniquely among sciences, the methodology of economics (its epistemology, ontology, scope, and focal ...
Many economists, and even methodologists, believe that the very abstractness of abstract methodology...
On the methodological plain, this paper outlines the conditions that contribute to the development o...
When a theory faces a set of facts that are not compatible with its key assumptions, there are sever...
This is Chapter 7 from Social Economics: An Alternative Theory (St. Martin's Press, 1991) Since Alf...
A commentary on the Neoclassical Economics as a Method of Scientific Research Program which argues, ...
Abstract: A Methodenstreit is a debate in economics concerning the philosophy of social science. It ...
The representation of the individual in economics as a rational homo oeconomicus had been seriously ...
Revealed Preference Theory (Samuelson 1938) is an attempt to establisheconomic theory as a genuine e...
abstract: I began this thesis because I was confused about economics. I wondered why there were so m...
Neoclassical Economics assumes that economic agents are independent and optimizing. The ac...
This is Chapter 4 from "Social Economics: An Alternative Theory" (St. Martin's Press, 1991). This c...
Orthodox neoclassical economists as well cannot make sense of economics, but they too can make sense...
This book offers a critical examination of the neoclassical model which typically fails to include a...
In the last few years a growing discontent with the neoclassical theoretical framework has led to th...
Uniquely among sciences, the methodology of economics (its epistemology, ontology, scope, and focal ...
Many economists, and even methodologists, believe that the very abstractness of abstract methodology...
On the methodological plain, this paper outlines the conditions that contribute to the development o...
When a theory faces a set of facts that are not compatible with its key assumptions, there are sever...
This is Chapter 7 from Social Economics: An Alternative Theory (St. Martin's Press, 1991) Since Alf...
A commentary on the Neoclassical Economics as a Method of Scientific Research Program which argues, ...
Abstract: A Methodenstreit is a debate in economics concerning the philosophy of social science. It ...
The representation of the individual in economics as a rational homo oeconomicus had been seriously ...
Revealed Preference Theory (Samuelson 1938) is an attempt to establisheconomic theory as a genuine e...
abstract: I began this thesis because I was confused about economics. I wondered why there were so m...
Neoclassical Economics assumes that economic agents are independent and optimizing. The ac...
This is Chapter 4 from "Social Economics: An Alternative Theory" (St. Martin's Press, 1991). This c...
Orthodox neoclassical economists as well cannot make sense of economics, but they too can make sense...