-
111The Road from Mont Pèlerin: The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective, With a New Preface (edited book)Harvard University Press. 2015.
-
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.
-
26IndexIn 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.
-
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.
-
103The 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
-
35Hugh Lacey, Is Science Value Free?: Values & Scientific Understanding. Routledge (1999), xiv, 285 pp., $90.00 (cloth)Philosophy of Science 69 (2): 386-389. 2002.
-
70More bleat than bite responses to Barnes, Cohen, hands, and wisePhilosophy of the Social Sciences 22 (1): 131-141. 1992.
-
1Some economists rush to rescue science from politics, only to discover in their haste, they went to the wrong addressIn Jeroen Van Bouwel (ed.), The Social Sciences and Democracy, Palgrave-macmillan. pp. 195. 2009.
-
381On playing the economics trump card in the philosophy of science: Why it did not work for Michael PolanyiPhilosophy of Science 64 (4): 138. 1997.The failure of the attempt by Michael Polanyi to capture the social organization of science by comparing it to the operation of a market bears salutary lessons for modern philosophers of science in their rush to appropriate market models and metaphors. In this case, an initially plausible invisible hand argument ended up as crude propaganda for the uniquely privileged social support of science
-
90Learning the Meaning of a Dollar: Conservation Principles and the Social Theory of Value in Economic TheorySocial Research: An International Quarterly 57 689-718. 1990.
-
174
-
63Science-Mart: Privatizing American ScienceHarvard University Press. 2011.This trenchant study analyzes the rise and decline in the quality and format of science in America since World War II. Science-Mart attributes this decline to a powerful neoliberal ideology in the 1980s which saw the fruits of scientific investigation as commodities that could be monetized, rather than as a public good.
-
14Philosophizing with a Hammer: Reply to Binmore, Davis & KlaesJournal of Economic Methodology 11 499-514. 2004.
-
127L'irraisonnable efficacité des mathématiques en économie moderneRue Descartes 74 (2): 117. 2012.
-
128A Beautiful Mind, Sylvia Nasar. Simon & Schuster, 1998, 461 pages (review)Economics and Philosophy 15 (2): 302. 1999.
-
85Harro Maas, William Stanley Jevons and the making of modern economics. Cambridge: Cambridge university press, 2005. Pp. XXII+330. Isbn 0-521-82712-4. $75.00 (review)British Journal for the History of Science 40 (2): 297-298. 2007.
-
170The scientific dimensions of social knowledge and their distant echoes in 20th-century American philosophy of scienceStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 35 (2): 283-326. 2004.The widespread impression that recent philosophy of science has pioneered exploration of the “social dimensions of scientific knowledge” is shown to be in error, partly due to a lack of appreciation of historical precedent, and partly due to a misunderstanding of how the social sciences and philosophy have been intertwined over the last century. This paper argues that the referents of “democracy” are an important key in the American context, and that orthodoxies in the philosophy of science tend…Read more
-
183Economics and Evolution, Geoffrey Hodgson. University of Michigan Press, 1993, xi + 381 pages (review)Economics and Philosophy 11 (2): 366. 1995.
-
42Natural Images in Economic Thought: Markets Read in Tooth and Claw (edited book)Cambridge University Press. 1994.This 1994 collection of interdisciplinary essays was the first to investigate how images in the history of the natural and physical sciences have been used to shape the history of economic thought. The contributors, historians of science and economics alike, document the extent to which scholars have drawn on physical and natural science to ground economic ideas and evaluate the role and importance of metaphors in the structure and content of economic thought. These range from Aristotle's discus…Read more
-
56Why there is (as yet) no such thing as an economics of knowledgeIn Don Ross & Harold Kincaid (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Economics, Oxford University Press. pp. 99--156. 2009.
-
299Economics, Science, and KnowledgeTradition and Discovery 25 (1): 29-42. 1998.The relationship between Friedrich Hayek and Michael Polanyi is documented and explored with respect to philosophy and economics. Their respective positions on epistemology and science are shown to fundamentally govern their differences with regard to the efficacy of government policy with regard to the economy.