Content
July 2017, Volume 24, Issue 3
- 251-253 Foreword: the Third International Conference of Economic Philosophy
by Gilles Campagnolo - 254-273 A new definition of and role for preferences in positive economics
by Bart Engelen - 274-296 Narrativity and identity in the representation of the economic agent
by Tom Juille & Dorian Jullien - 297-317 Non-causal understanding with economic models: the case of general equilibrium
by Philippe Verreault-Julien - 318-343 Mindreading and endogenous beliefs in games
by Lauren Larrouy & Guilhem Lecouteux - 344-348 Science outside the laboratory: measurement in field science and economics
by Henrik Roeland Visser - 349-355 The public vs. private value of health, and their relationship
by S. Andrew Schroeder - 356-357 Notes on contributors
by The Editors
April 2017, Volume 24, Issue 2
- 117-118 Introduction to special issue on INEM 2015
by Don Ross - 119-133 Enriching economics in South Africa: interdisciplinary collaboration and the value of quantitative – qualitative exchanges
by Dorrit Posel - 134-149 Fact-value entanglement in positive economics
by Julian Reiss - 150-165 The empirical adequacy of cumulative prospect theory and its implications for normative assessment
by Glenn W. Harrison & Don Ross - 166-189 Hyperbolic delay discounting integrates five approaches to impulsive choice
by George Ainslie - 190-203 Does studying ethics affect moral views? An application to economic justice
by James Konow - 204-210 Of consequentialism, its critics, and the critics of its critics
by Ravi Kanbur - 211-212 Notes on contributors
by The Editors
January 2017, Volume 24, Issue 1
- 1-19 Sen is not a capability theorist
by Antoinette Baujard & Muriel Gilardone - 20-40 A cognition paradigm clash: Simon, situated cognition and the interpretation of bounded rationality
by Enrico Petracca - 41-68 The critical realist conception of open and closed systems
by Steve Fleetwood - 69-89 Critical reflections on a realist interpretation of Friedman’s ‘Methodology of Positive Economics’
by Edward Mariyani-Squire - 90-103 Positive public economics: reinterpreting ‘optimal’ policies
by Brian C. Albrecht - 104-108 Between a compendium and a hard place
by Tiago Mata - 108-114 Experimental methodology on the move
by Francesco Guala - 115-116 Notes on contributors
by The Editors
October 2016, Volume 23, Issue 4
- () Editorial Board
by The Editors - 349-373 Sen’s criticism of revealed preference theory and its ‘neo-samuelsonian critique’: a methodological and theoretical assessment
by Cyril Hédoin - 374-395 Constitutive explanations in neuroeconomics: principles and a case study on money
by Carsten Herrmann-Pillath - 396-412 Space for virtue in the economics of Kenneth J. Arrow, Amartya Sen and Elinor Ostrom
by Dominic Burbidge - 413-431 Financial functional analysis: a conceptual framework for understanding the changing financial system
by John P. Wilson & Larry Campbell - 432-433 Notes on contributors
by John Davis
July 2016, Volume 23, Issue 3
- 237-240 Introduction to symposium on ‘Patrick Suppes, economics, and economic methodology’
by D. Wade Hands - 241-251 Patrick Suppes and game theory
by Ken Binmore - 252-267 Measurement theory and utility analysis in Suppes’ early work, 1951–1958
by Ivan Moscati - 268-288 Choice-based cardinal utility: a tribute to Patrick Suppes
by Jean Baccelli & Philippe Mongin - 289-304 Suppes’ probabilistic theory of causality and causal inference in economics
by Julian Reiss - 305-315 Suppes’s outlines of an empirical measurement theory
by Marcel Boumans - 316-332 Freedom and choice in economics
by Adolfo García de la Sienra - 333-346 The world in axioms: an interview with Patrick Suppes
by Catherine Herfeld - 347-348 Notes on contributors
by John Davis
June 2016, Volume 23, Issue 2
- 127-129 Introduction to discussion forum on Glenn W. Harrison’s ‘field experiments and methodological intolerance’
by Don Ross - 130-138 Robert A. Millikan meets the credibility revolution: comment on Harrison (2013), ‘field experiments and methodological intolerance’
by Nathaniel T. Wilcox - 139-146 Methodological ignorance: A comment on field experiments and methodological intolerance
by Marcel Boumans - 147-156 Experiments, policy, and theory in development economics: a response to Glenn Harrison’s ‘field experiments and methodological intolerance’
by Thomas Bossuroy & Clara Delavallade - 157-159 Field experiments and methodological intolerance: reply
by Glenn W. Harrison - 160-184 Economics is not always performative: some limits for performativity
by Nicolas Brisset - 185-202 Beyond welfare economics: some methodological issues
by Giuseppe Munda - 203-222 On the analogy between field experiments in economics and clinical trials in medicine
by Judith Favereau - 223-227 Methodological misconceptions in the social sciences. Rethinking social thought and social processes
by Carsten Herrmann-Pillath - 227-234 Hayek and Popper: on rationality, economism, and democracy
by Bruce Caldwell
March 2016, Volume 23, Issue 1
- 1-25 Preference purification and the inner rational agent: a critique of the conventional wisdom of behavioural welfare economics
by Gerardo Infante & Guilhem Lecouteux & Robert Sugden - 26-32 On the Econ within
by Daniel M. Hausman - 33-37 ‘On the Econ within’: a reply to Daniel Hausman
by Gerardo Infante & Guilhem Lecouteux & Robert Sugden - 38-56 Adjusting the model to adjust the world: constructive mechanisms in postwar general equilibrium theory
by Ivan Boldyrev & Alexey Ushakov - 57-76 Firms, agency, and evolution
by Armin W. Schulz - 77-96 Five theses on neuroeconomics
by Roberto Fumagalli - 97-109 The scientific limits of understanding the (potential) relationship between complex social phenomena: the case of democracy and inequality
by Alexander Krauss - 110-114 Governing in a complex society
by Wilfred Dolfsma - 115-120 Economic pluralism for the lecture hall
by Manuel Scholz-Wäckerle - 120-126 Economic methodology into the practice of economics
by Vítor Neves
December 2015, Volume 22, Issue 4
- 413-438 Between Lévi-Strauss and Braudel: Furtado and the historical-structural method in Latin American political economy
by Mauro Boianovsky - 439-461 Accounting for constitutive rules in game theory
by Cyril Hédoin - 462-478 The long-term viability of team reasoning
by S.M. Amadae & Daniel Lempert - 479-490 Mathematics and economics: the case of Menger
by Josef Mensik - 491-516 Abduction and economics: the contributions of Charles Peirce and Herbert Simon
by Ramzi Mabsout - 517-520 Economic rebel in retrospect
by Steven G. Medema - 520-525 The limits of inference without theory
by Attilia Ruzzene - 526-527 Thomas Mayer
by Kevin D. Hoover
September 2015, Volume 22, Issue 3
- 261-263 The future of the philosophy of economics: papers from the XI. INEM Conference at Erasmus University Rotterdam
by Constanze Binder & Conrad Heilmann & Jack Vromen - 264-279 Policy-making in developing countries: from prediction to planning
by Attilia Ruzzene - 280-291 Can an evidential account justify relying on preferences for well-being policy?
by Gil Hersch - 292-311 Representation theorems and the semantics of decision-theoretic concepts
by Mikaël Cozic & Brian Hill - 312-334 Rationality and the Bayesian paradigm
by Itzhak Gilboa - 335-353 On the meaning of non-welfarism in Kolm's ELIE model of income redistribution
by Jean-Sébastien Gharbi & Yves Meinard - 354-372 Rethinking the ethics of incentives
by Ruth W. Grant - 373-390 Two approaches to reasoning from evidence or what econometrics can learn from biomedical research
by Julian Reiss - 391-409 Expertise and institutional design in economic committees
by Carlo Martini
June 2015, Volume 22, Issue 2
- 143-156 What are stylized facts?
by Leticia Arroyo Abad & Kareem Khalifa - 157-170 Making sense of economists' positive-normative distinction
by David Colander & Huei-Chun Su - 171-196 Revisiting Haavelmo's structural econometrics: bridging the gap between theory and data
by Aris Spanos - 197-214 Structured causal pluralism in poverty analysis
by Paul Shaffer - 215-234 Slaves of the defunct: the epistemic intractability of the Hayek-Keynes debate
by Scott Scheall - 235-240 The world in the model: how economists work and think , by Mary S. Morgan, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2012, 435 pp. A world of models: review of Mary S. Morgan, The world in the model: how economists work and think
by Itzhak Gilboa - 241-246 Much ado about models
by Daniel M. Hausman - 247-248 How economists work and think
by Erik Angner - 249-253 Economic models as exploration devices
by Liliana Doganova - 254-258 Moving forward on models
by Mary S. Morgan
March 2015, Volume 22, Issue 1
- 1-27 Simulation, computation and dynamics in economics
by K. Vela Velupillai & Stefano Zambelli - 28-45 A Kuhnian perspective on asset pricing theory
by Nicholas J. Mangee - 46-76 The challenge of empirically assessing the effects of constitutions
by Vlad Tarko - 77-95 From Edgeworth to econophysics: a methodological perspective
by Stavros Drakopoulos & Ioannis Katselidis - 96-122 Old lady charm: explaining the persistent appeal of Chicago antitrust
by Nicola Giocoli - 123-128 Philosophy of economics
by Michiru Nagatsu - 128-134 A cooperative species: human reciprocity and its evolution
by Till Grüne-Yanoff - 134-139 Finding Equilibrium: Arrow, Debreu, McKenzie and the problem of scientific credit
by Camila Orozco Espinel
October 2014, Volume 21, Issue 4
- 1-1 Editorial Board
by The Editors - 428-429 Notes on contributors
by The Editors
December 2014, Volume 21, Issue 4
- 325-342 Introduction: methodologies of bounded rationality
by Till Grüne-Yanoff & Caterina Marchionni & Ivan Moscati - 343-360 Welfare economics and bounded rationality: the case for model-based approaches
by Paola Manzini & Marco Mariotti - 361-374 Bounded rationality: the two cultures
by Konstantinos V. Katsikopoulos - 375-395 The consistency and ecological rationality approaches to normative bounded rationality
by Nathan Berg - 396-410 Normative ecological rationality: normative rationality in the fast-and-frugal-heuristics research program
by D. Wade Hands - 411-427 Psychological versus economic models of bounded rationality
by Don Ross
September 2014, Volume 21, Issue 3
- 211-231 The power of stereotyping and confirmation bias to overwhelm accurate assessment: the case of economics, gender, and risk aversion
by Julie A. Nelson - 232-250 A probabilistic ghost in the experimental machine
by Dorian Jullien & Nicolas Vallois - 251-272 Conventionalism, coordination, and mental models: from Poincaré to Simon
by Rouslan Koumakhov - 273-289 Normative and positive theories of public finance: contrasting Musgrave and Buchanan
by Maxime Desmarais-Tremblay - 290-307 Frank Knight's 'categories' and the definition of economics
by John Hart - 308-312 The foundations of economic complexity in behavioral rationality and heterogeneous expectations
by J. Barkley Rosser - 313-316 Rethinking rational expectations in complex economic systems: Cars Hommes' resurrection of Poincaré's view
by Alan Kirman - 317-321 A reply to Rosser and Kirman
by Cars Hommes
June 2014, Volume 21, Issue 2
- 107-124 To stylize or not to stylize, is it a fact then? Clarifying the role of stylized facts in empirical model evaluation
by Stefan Mendritzki - 125-138 Epistemological foundations for the assessment of risks in banking and finance
by Guillaume Vuillemey - 139-157 Logic, rationality and knowledge in Ramsey's thought: reassessing 'human logic'
by Marion Gaspard - 158-174 'Economic imperialism' in health care resource allocation - how can equity considerations be incorporated into economic evaluation?
by Andrea Klonschinski - 175-192 The economic debate on power: a Marxist critique
by Giulio Palermo - 193-198 Theory of conditional games
by Don Ross - 198-202 Philosophy of economics: a contemporary introduction
by María Jiménez-Buedo - 202-207 Theoretical and practical reason in economics: capacities and capabilities
by Thomas R. Wells
March 2014, Volume 21, Issue 1
- 1-2 Introduction to the special issue: papers from the IX INEM Conference in Helsinki
by Aki Lehtinen & Uskali Mäki & Caterina Marchionni - 3-18 Why macroeconomics does not supervene on microeconomics
by Brian Epstein - 19-36 Understanding with theoretical models
by Petri Ylikoski & N. Emrah Aydinonat - 37-53 A non-monotonic intensional framework for framing effects
by Silvia Lerner - 54-76 Causal models and evidential pluralism in econometrics
by Alessio Moneta & Federica Russo - 77-91 The role of experts in the methodology of economics
by Carlo Martini - 92-95 Mainstreaming Behavioral Economics
by Floris Heukelom - 96-98 Philosophy of economics [Handbook of the philosophy of science, vol. 13]
by David Teira - 98-103 Philosophy of economics for real
by Stefan Mendritzki
December 2013, Volume 20, Issue 4
- 303-308 Introduction to symposium on 'reflexivity and economics: George Soros's theory of reflexivity and the methodology of economic science'
by D. Wade Hands - 309-329 Fallibility, reflexivity, and the human uncertainty principle
by George Soros - 330-342 Reflexivity, complexity, and the nature of social science
by Eric D. Beinhocker - 343-349 Reflexivity unpacked: performativity, uncertainty and analytical monocultures
by Richard Bronk - 350-356 George Soros: Hayekian?
by Bruce Caldwell - 357-367 Reflections on Soros: Mach, Quine, Arthur and far-from-equilibrium dynamics
by Rod Cross & Harold Hutchinson & Harbir Lamba & Doug Strachan - 368-376 Soros's reflexivity concept in a complex world: Cauchy distributions, rational expectations, and rational addiction
by John B. Davis - 377-385 Hypotheses non fingo: Problems with the scientific method in economics
by J. Doyne Farmer - 386-396 Fallibility in formal macroeconomics and finance theory
by Roman Frydman & Michael D. Goldberg - 397-405 Reflexivity and equilibria
by Francesco Guala - 406-419 Reflexivity, expectations feedback and almost self-fulfilling equilibria: economic theory, empirical evidence and laboratory experiments
by Cars Hommes - 420-428 Soros and Popper: on fallibility, reflexivity, and the unity of method
by Mark Amadeus Notturno - 429-438 Reflexivity, uncertainty and the unity of science
by Alex Rosenberg - 439-445 On the role of reflexivity in economic analysis
by Anwar Shaikh - 446-453 Broader scopes of the reflexivity principle in the economy
by Yi-Cheng Zhang
September 2013, Volume 20, Issue 3
- 235-236 Introduction to symposium on the explanation paradox
by D. Wade Hands - 237-243 How fictional accounts can explain
by Robert Sugden - 244-249 Reply to Julian Reiss
by Menno Rol - 250-254 Paradox postponed
by Daniel M. Hausman - 255-261 Genuineness resolved: a reply to Reiss' purported paradox
by Till Grüne-Yanoff - 262-267 It's just a feeling: why economic models do not explain
by Anna Alexandrova & Robert Northcott - 268-279 On a paradox of truth, or how not to obscure the issue of whether explanatory models can be true
by Uskali Mäki - 280-292 The explanation paradox redux
by Julian Reiss
June 2013, Volume 20, Issue 2
- 103-117 Field experiments and methodological intolerance
by Glenn W. Harrison - 118-138 Change and expectations in macroeconomic models: recognizing the limits to knowability
by Roman Frydman & Michael D. Goldberg - 139-163 Performativity of economic systems: approach and implications for taxonomy
by Carsten Herrmann-Pillath - 164-183 Towards a transdisciplinary econophysics
by Christophe Schinckus & Franck Jovanovic - 184-205 Three kinds of ‘as-if’ claims
by Aki Lehtinen - 206-210 Preferences as total subjective comparative evaluations
by Aki Lehtinen - 211-214 Asymmetric paternalism for economists
by Miriam Teschl - 215-218 The concepts of choice and preference in economics
by Prasanta K. Pattanaik - 219-223 A reply to Lehtinen, Teschl and Pattanaik
by Daniel M. Hausman
2013, Volume 20, Issue 1
- 1-5 Introduction: Methodology, systemic risk, and the economics profession
by John Davis & Wade Hands - 6-18 Modeling herding behavior and its risks
by Michael Weisberg - 19-34 Herding and the quest for credit
by Michael Strevens - 35-44 Herding, social influence and expert opinion
by Michelle Baddeley - 45-55 Bad advice, herding and bubbles
by Mark Thoma - 56-68 The systemic failure of economic methodologists
by David Colander - 69-75 Beyond mechanical markets – asset price swings, risk and the role of the state
by Kevin Hoover - 75-81 Science-mart: privatizing American science
by Tiago Mata - 81-86 The Elgar companion to recent economic methodology
by François Claveau - 86-91 The making of the economy: a phenomenology of economic science
by Edward Nik-Khah - 92-94 Notes on contributors
by The Editors - 95-95 Erratum
by The Editors
December 2012, Volume 19, Issue 4
- 339-355 The firm, property rights and methodological individualism: some lessons from J.S. Mill
by Amos Witztum - 357-374 The history of the use of self-reports and the methodology of economics
by José M. Edwards - 375-390 Beyond the positive--normative dichotomy: some remarks on Colander's Lost Art of Economics
by Huei-chun Su - 391-406 New economics of science, economics of scientific knowledge and sociology of science: the case of Paul David
by Matthieu Ballandonne - 407-424 ‘Heterodox economics’ and the problems of classification
by Andrew Mearman - 437-442 Famous figures and diagrams in economics
by Daniel Little - 442-446 Economists and societies: discipline and profession in the United States, Britain, & France, 1890s to 1990s
by D. Wade Hands - 446-451 Individuals and identity in economics
by Don Ross - 451-457 The hesitant hand. Taming self-interest in the history of economic ideas
by Nicola Giocoli
September 2012, Volume 19, Issue 3
- 187-192 The paradox of popularity in economics
by Diane Coyle - 193-198 A less-is-more approach to introductory economics
by Robert H. Frank - 199-217 Finding the right levers: the serious side of ‘economics made fun’
by Jack Vromen - 219-230 On the philosophy of the new kiosk economics of everything
by Uskali Mäki - 231-241 Economics is a serious and difficult subject
by Roger E. Backhouse - 243-258 The two images of economics: why the fun disappears when difficult questions are at stake?
by N. Emrah Aydinonat - 259-282 Inland empire: economics imperialism as an imperative of Chicago neoliberalism
by Edward Nik-Khah & Robert Van Horn - 283-301 The unbearable lightness of the economics-made-fun genre
by Peter Spiegler - 303-316 The evolving notion of relevance: an historical perspective to the ‘economics made fun’ movement
by Jean-Baptiste Fleury - 317-327 Economic page turners
by Björn Frank
June 2012, Volume 19, Issue 2
- 99-99 Introduction: values and justice
by John B. Davis - 101-108 Values and justice
by Amartya Sen - 109-119 Values, classical political economy and the Portuguese empire
by Emma Rothschild - 121-141 On the centrality of human value
by Teresa Carla Oliveira & Stuart Holland - 143-157 Sen, Sraffa and the revival of classical political economy
by Nuno Ornelas Martins - 159-163 Are transcendental theories of justice redundant?
by Ingrid Robeyns - 165-167 Sen's Idea of Justice and the locus of normative reasoning
by Fabienne Peter - 169-172 The idea of public reasoning
by John B. Davis