Description
The Nature of Economic Thought brings together in one volume Professor Klant's seminal work on the philosophy and methodology of economics. After a brief description of the history of economics and its position as science, art and philosophy, the book offers discussion of the logical structure of economic theories, Milton Friedman's use of metaphor and John Maynard Keynes's methodology including his view on the intuitive process and his adherence to Marshallian instrumentalism. The final paper presents an historical analysis of the natural order ideal in economics and critically assesses the approaches of Max Weber and Karl Popper.
Always rigorous and cogent, the essays in this volume will be welcomed by the growing numbers of scholars interested in economic methodology and the history of economics thought.
About the Author
The late Johannes J. Klant, former Professor Emeritus, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Translated by Trevor S. Preston
Reviews
'For starters, let me say that this is an unusually wise and beautifully-written book, dealing sophisticatedly with three topics: (1) How economics has evolved from a philosophic first to a professional and then quite possibly to a scientific discipline; (2) The evolution of an economic methodology, subjected by the author to a detached criticism, and (3) A synthesis of what most of us consider to have been what the leading writers wanted to do with their subject. . . It is an excellent read and a very important buy.'
Book Information
ISBN 9781858980188
Author Johannes J. Klant
Format Hardback
Page Count 160
Imprint Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Publisher Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd