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Thorstein Veblen has made an immeasurable impact on the development
of economics. His legacy has been to challenge orthodox thinking
and inspire the institutionalist and evolutionary school of
thought. In this book, a distinguished group of contributors
analyzes the impact, a century later, of Veblen's 1898 challenge to
economics. The authors examine the contribution of Veblen and some
of his disciples to heterodox economics. They also reassess other
contemporaneous discussions and contributions by other authors -
Mitchell, Ayres, Commons, Keynes, Schumpeter, Tinbergen, Frisch -
and present an overview of the state of the art in evolutionary
economics.
Originally published in 1972. Hoover's first publication, his
doctoral dissertation, set the stage for a life-long preoccupation
with spatial economics from when it was a relatively new field. His
work developed the subject and lead him into the area of regional
economics, in which he became well known for his contributions to
the New York Metropolitan Region Study. In this book his colleagues
and a host of former students and admirers present chapters written
within his areas of interest in honor of his work, at the end of
his academic career, during which he mostly taught at the
University of Michigan and the University of Pittsburgh.
Due to the urbanisation of American society and the economic
problems that accompanied it; a series of conferences was held to
explore the economics of human resources. Originally published in
1963, this study draws together papers from the first conference
dealing mainly with the under-utilisation and misallocation of
human resources, as well as wage rates, migration patterns and
education in urban societies and the impact they have on the
American labour force. This title will be of interest to students
of Environmental Studies and Economics.
Due to the urbanisation of American society and the economic
problems that accompanied it; a series of conferences was held to
explore the economics of human resources. Originally published in
1963, this study draws together papers from the first conference
dealing mainly with the under-utilisation and misallocation of
human resources, as well as wage rates, migration patterns and
education in urban societies and the impact they have on the
American labour force. This title will be of interest to students
of Environmental Studies and Economics.
Concepts of probability are an integral component of economic
theory. However there are many theories of probability and these
are manifested in different approaches to economic theory itself.
This text offers a clear and informative survey of the area serving
to standardize terminology, and so to integrate probability into a
discussion of the foundations of economic theory. Having summarized
the three main, competing interpretations of probability, the
author explains its fundamental importance in economics, and
illustrates this with a comparison of Knight's and Keynes's very
different conceptions. Finally, he examines the Austrian, Keynesian
and New Classical/Rational Expectation schools of thought.
Originally published in 1972. Hoover's first publication, his
doctoral dissertation, set the stage for a life-long preoccupation
with spatial economics from when it was a relatively new field. His
work developed the subject and lead him into the area of regional
economics, in which he became well known for his contributions to
the New York Metropolitan Region Study. In this book his colleagues
and a host of former students and admirers present chapters written
within his areas of interest in honor of his work, at the end of
his academic career, during which he mostly taught at the
University of Michigan and the University of Pittsburgh.
First published in 1994. Concepts of probability are an integral
component of economic theory. However there are a wide range of
theories of probability and these are manifested in different
approaches to economic theory itself. In this book Charles McCann,
Jr provides a clear and informative survey of the area which serves
to standardize terminology and so integrate probability into a
discussion of the foundations of economic theory. This is
illustrated by examples from Austrian, Keynesian and New Classical
Economics.
Fifteen leading contributors to philosophy of psychology and philosophy of biology present new essays on functions, specially written for this volume. In explaining aspects of the natural world, including the aspects of mind, scientists have frequently used the concept of function. But what are functions? These essays illuminate this crucial but problematic concept, and will be fascinating reading for philosophers and scientists alike.
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