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Deductive Irrationality examines and critiques economic rationalism
from the perspective of political philosophy. The essays in this
collection analyze not only the work of founders of the discipline
of economics, but also political philosophers influential in this
founding and select contributors of seminal theories in modern
economic thought_namely, Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Adam Smith,
Alfred Marshall, John Maynard Keynes, Friedrich Hayek, Gunnar
Myrdal, Robert E. Lucas Jr., and John F. Muth. The main theme
linking all of the essays together is that economics is a product
of modern rationalism and shares with that rationalism the belief
that the only real knowledge is scientific knowledge. Derived from
a scientific method modeled on mathematics, this method gives both
modern political science and modern economics their abstract
character. Adam Smith's contribution to Western thought was more
than mere economics; his innovations and his variance from previous
thinkers follows Machiavelli in finding human nature in the
realistic conception of examining men as how they are, rather than
the classical view that we should look to the idea of man's formal
excellence. To Smith, humanity emerges from a desire for
self-preservation, where every worker competes to exchange the
fruits of their labor with that of others. The result is a gap
between the world of 'common sense' and the world of theory that
practitioners in both fields no longer truly understand. By
adopting the perspective of political philosophy, the contributors
take an approach that is alien to most economists, and in doing so
address many of the currents and tensions that underlie modern
economic theory and, by implication, the rational choice theory in
political science.
Deductive Irrationality examines and critiques economic rationalism
from the perspective of political philosophy. The essays in this
collection analyze not only the work of founders of the discipline
of economics, but also political philosophers influential in this
founding and select contributors of seminal theories in modern
economic thought namely, Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Adam Smith,
Alfred Marshall, John Maynard Keynes, Friedrich Hayek, Gunnar
Myrdal, Robert E. Lucas Jr., and John F. Muth. The main theme
linking all of the essays together is that economics is a product
of modern rationalism and shares with that rationalism the belief
that the only real knowledge is scientific knowledge. Derived from
a scientific method modeled on mathematics, this method gives both
modern political science and modern economics their abstract
character. Adam Smith's contribution to Western thought was more
than mere economics; his innovations and his variance from previous
thinkers follows Machiavelli in finding human nature in the
realistic conception of examining men as how they are, rather than
the classical view that we should look to the idea of man's formal
excellence. To Smith, humanity emerges from a desire for
self-preservation, where every worker competes to exchange the
fruits of their labor with that of others. The result is a gap
between the world of "common sense" and the world of theory that
practitioners in both fields no longer truly understand. By
adopting the perspective of political philosophy, the contributors
take an approach that is alien to most economists, and in doing so
address many of the currents and tensions that underlie modern
economic theory and, by implication, the rational choice theory in
political science."
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