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108The Road from Mont Pèlerin: The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective, With a New Preface (edited book)Harvard University Press. 2015.
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12PrefaceIn Philip Mirowski & Dieter Plehwe (eds.), The Road from Mont Pèlerin: The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective, With a New Preface, Harvard University Press. 2015.
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24IndexIn Philip Mirowski & Dieter Plehwe (eds.), The Road from Mont Pèlerin: The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective, With a New Preface, Harvard University Press. pp. 459-472. 2015.
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14List of ContributorsIn Philip Mirowski & Dieter Plehwe (eds.), The Road from Mont Pèlerin: The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective, With a New Preface, Harvard University Press. pp. 457-458. 2015.
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101The Pure and the Applied: Bourbakism Comes to Mathematical EconomicsScience in Context 7 (2): 245-272. 1994.The ArgumentIn the minds of many, the Bourbakist trend in mathematics was characterized by pursuit of rigor to the detriment of concern for applications or didactic concessions to the nonmathematician, which would seem to render the concept of a Bourbakist incursion into a field of applied mathematices an oxymoron. We argue that such a conjuncture did in fact happen in postwar mathematical economics, and describe the career of Gérard Debreu to illustrate how it happened. Using the work of Leo Co…Read more
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94How not to do Things with Metaphors: Paul Samuelson and the Science of Neoclassical EconomicsStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 20 (2): 175. 1989.
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87The unreasonable efficacy of mathematics in modern economicsIn Uskali Mäki, Dov M. Gabbay, Paul Thagard & John Woods (eds.), Philosophy of economics, North Holland. pp. 159. 2012.
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56
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1The Contract Research Organization and the Commercialization of Scientific ResearchSocial Studies of Science 35 (4): 503-48. 2005.
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1Refusing the giftIn Stephen Cullenberg, Jack Amariglio & David F. Ruccio (eds.), Postmodernism, economics and knowledge, Routledge. pp. 431--458. 2001.
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24Building Chicago Economics: New Perspectives on the History of America's Most Powerful Economics Program (edited book)Cambridge University Press. 2011.Over the past forty years, economists associated with the University of Chicago have won more than one-third of the Nobel prizes awarded in their discipline and have been major influences on American public policy. Building Chicago Economics presents the first collective attempt by social science historians to chart the rise and development of the Chicago School during the decades that followed the Second World War. Drawing on new research in published and archival sources, contributors examine …Read more
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101Looking for Those Natural Numbers: Dimensionless Constants and the Idea of Natural MeasurementScience in Context 5 (1): 165-188. 1992.The ArgumentMany find it “notoriously difficult to see how societal context can affect in any essential way how someone solves a mathematical problem or makes a measurement.” That may be because it has been a habit of western scientists to assert their numerical schemes were untainted by any hint of anthropomorphism. Nevertheless, that Platonist penchant has always encountered obstacles in practice, primarily because the stability of any applied numerical scheme requires some alien or external w…Read more
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63Hoedown at the OK Corral: more reflections on the ‘social’ in current philosophy of scienceStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 36 (4): 790-800. 2005.
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4520 The spontaneous methodology of orthodoxy, and other economists' afflictions in the Great RecessionIn J. B. Davis & D. W. Hands (eds.), Elgar Companion to Recent Economic Methodology, Edward Elgar Publishers. pp. 473. 2011.
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157Shall I Compare Thee to a Minkowski-Ricardo-Leontief-Metzler Matrix of the Mosak-Hicks Type?: Or, Rhetoric, Mathematics, and the Nature of Neoclassical Economic TheoryEconomics and Philosophy 3 (1): 67-95. 1987.Is rhetoric just a new and trendy way toépater les bourgeois?Unfortunately, I think that the newfound interest of some economists in rhetoric, and particularly Donald McCloskey in his new book and subsequent responses to critics, gives that impression. After economists have worked so hard for the past five decades to learn their sums, differential calculus, real analysis, and topology, it is a fair bet that one could easily hector them about their woeful ignorance of the conjugation of Latin ver…Read more
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77Paul Erickson. The World the Game Theorists Made. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015. Pp. 384. $35.00Hopos: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science 7 (1): 160-163. 2017.
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1More Heat Than Light: Economics as Social Physics, Physics as Nature's EconomicsCambridge University Press. 1991.More Heat Than Light is a history of how physics has drawn some inspiration from economics and also how economics has sought to emulate physics, especially with regard to the theory of value. It traces the development of the energy concept in Western physics and its subsequent effect upon the invention and promulgation of neoclassical economics. Any discussion of the standing of economics as a science must include the historical symbiosis between the two disciplines. Starting with the philosophe…Read more
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1How positivism made a pact with the postwar social sciences in the United StatesIn George Steinmetz (ed.), The politics of method in the human sciences: positivism and its epistemological others, Duke University Press. pp. 142--72. 2005.
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120The role of conservation principles in twentieth-century economic theoryPhilosophy of the Social Sciences 14 (4): 461-473. 1984.
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49The economics of economists: institutional setting, individual incentives, and future prospects, edited by Alessandro Lanteri, and Jack Vromen. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014, 374 pp (review)Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics 8 (1): 105. 2015.
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147Postface:Defining NeoliberalismIn Philip Mirowski & Dieter Plehwe (eds.), The Road from Mont Pèlerin: The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective, With a New Preface, Harvard University Press. pp. 417-456. 2015.
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944. The Rise of the Chicago School of Economics and the Birth of NeoliberalismIn Philip Mirowski & Dieter Plehwe (eds.), The Road from Mont Pèlerin: The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective, With a New Preface, Harvard University Press. pp. 139-178. 2015.
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54Livin' with the MTAMinerva 46 (3): 317-342. 2008.Although the push to get universities to accumulate IP by commercializing their scientific research was a conscious movement, dealing with the blowback in the form of contracts over the transfer of research tools and inputs, called materials transfer agreements (MTAs), was greeted by universities as an afterthought. Faculty often regarded them as an irritant, and TTOs were not much more welcoming. One reason universities could initially ignore the obvious connection between the pursuit of patent…Read more