![]() |
The Worldly Philosophers at Fifty
Volume 71 No. 2 (Summer 2004) Arien Mack, Editor William Milberg, Guest Editor |
| Editor's Note |
Guest Editor's Note |
List of Robert Heilbroner's papers in Social Research |
Table of Contents | Notes on Contributors | Ordering information |
Table of Contents
| Part 1 |
Heilbroner's Methodology |
| Robert M. Solow |
Even a Worldly Philosopher Needs a
Good Mechanic [Read Solow's complete paper] |
| Julie A. Nelson |
Is Economics a Natural Science? |
| Susan Haack |
Science, Economics, "Vision" |
| William Milberg | The Robert Heilbroner Problem |
| Arjo Klamer |
Visualizing the Economy |
| Part 2 |
Worldly Philosophy and Twenty-First-Century
Capitalism |
| Lester C. Thurow |
Do Only Economic Illiterates Argue That Trade Can Destroy
Jobs and Lower America's National Income? [Read Thurow's complete paper] |
| Jan Kregel |
Two Views on the Obstacles to Development |
| James K. Galbraith |
The Worldly Philosophers and the War Economy |
| Ravi Baghirathan, Codrina Rada, and Lance
Taylor |
Structuralist Economics: Worldly Philosophers, Models,
Methodology |
| Part 3 |
Rethinking Markets, Rationality, and Choice |
| Duncan K. Foley |
Rationality and Ideology in Economics |
| Nancy Folbre |
Sleeping Beauty Awakes:
Self-Interest, Feminism, and Fertility in the Early Twentieth Century [Read Folbre's complete paper] |
| Warren J.
Samuels |
Markets and Their Social
Construction |
| Anwar Shaikh |
The Power of Profit |
| Part 4 |
Heilbroner in the History of Economic
Thought |
| Robert W.
Dimand |
Heilbroner and Polanyi: A
Shared Vision |
| Mathew
Forstater |
Envisioning Provisioning:
Adolph Lowe and Heilbroner's Worldly Philosophy |
| Peter L.
Bernstein |
The Worldly Philosopher Behind
The Worldly Philosophers [Read Bernstein's complete paper] |
Notes
on Contributors
(at
time of publication)
Structuralist Economics: Worldly Philosophers, Models, Methodology Ravi Baghirathan, Codrina Rada, and Lance Taylor Ravi Baghirathan is a
graduate student at the Graduate Faculty, New School University, and a
researcher at the Center for Economic Policy Analysis. He is currently
pursuing research in the philosophy of science and the history of
economic thought. Lance Taylor is
Arnhold Professor of International Cooperation and Development and
Director of the Center for Economic Policy Analysis at the New School
University. His most recent book is Reconstructing Macroeconomics:
Structuralist Proposals and Critiques of the Mainstream (2004). The Worldly Philosopher Behnind The Worldly Philosophers Peter L. Bernstein [Read Bernstein's complete paper] Peter L. Bernstein is publisher of Economics and Portfolio Strategy, a newsletter for institutional investors, and Consulting Editor of The Journal of Portfolio Management. His latest book is The Power of Gold: The History of an Obsession (2000). Back To Top Heilbroner and Polanyi: A Shared Vision Robert W. Dimand Robert W. Dimand is Professor of Economics at Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada. He publishes on the history of macroeconomics, the early history of game theory, and the history of women in economics. Back To Top Sleeping Beauty Awakes: Self-Interest,
Feminism, and Fertility in the Early Twentieth Century Nancy Folbre is
Professor of Economics at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
She is author of The Invisible Heart: Economics and Family Values
(2001). Her newest book, Our Children, Ourselves: Rethinking the
Economics of the Family, is in progress. Rationality and Ideology in Economics Duncan K. Foley Duncan K. Foley is Chair and Leo Model Professor of Economics at the Graduate Faculty, New School University. Back To Top Envisioning Provisioning: Adolph Lowe and Heilbroner's Worldly Philosophy Mathew Forstater Mathew Forstater is Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri, Kansas City. Forstater, who was a Teaching and Research Assistant of Robert Heilbroner's from 1987 to 1992, wrote his Ph.D. dissertation on Adolph Lowe under Heilbroner's supervision. Back To Top The Worldly Philosophers and the War Economy James K. Galbraith James K. Galbraith is Chair of Economists Allied for Arms Reduction. He holds the Lloyd Bentsen Jr. Chair in Government/Business Relations at the University of Texas at Austin, and is Senior Scholar at the Levy Economics Institute, Bard College. He directs the University of Texas Inequality Project. Back To Top Science, Economics, "Vision" Susan Haack Susan Haack is
internationally known for her work in logic, epistemology, philosophy
of science, and the law of evidence. Since finishing her most recent
book, Defending Science--Within Reason: Between Science and Cynicism
(2003), she has written a series of articles on scientific testimony in
the courts. Visualizing the Economy Arjo Klamer Arjo Klamer, has been professor of cultural economics at the Erasmus University of Rotterdam since 1994. His numerous publications include The Value of Culture: On the Relationship between Economics and Arts (ed. 1996; see <html://www.klamer.nl>).
Two Views on the Obstacles to Development Jan Kregel Jan Kregel is Senior
Interregional Adviser for the UN Conference on Trade and Development,
New York Liaison Office. His publications include "External Financing
for Development and International Financial Instability" (XVIII
Meeting, G-24 Technical Group, March 2004). The Robert Heilbroner Problem William Milberg William Milberg is Associate Professor of Economics at the New School's Graduate Faculty. He is coauthor (with Robert Heilbroner) of The Crisis of Vision in Modern Economic Thought and The Making of Economic Society. Back To Top
Is Economics a Natural Science?
Back To Top Markets and Their Social Construction Warren J. Samuels Warren J. Samuels is Professor Emeritus of Economics at Michigan State University. His Essays on the History of Economics is forthcoming with Routledge in 2004. His principal research is on the use of the concept of the invisible hand. Back To Top The Power of Profit Anwar Shaikh Anwar Shaikh is Professor of Economics at the Graduate Faculty, New School University, and Senior Scholar and Member of the Macro Modeling Team at the Levy Economics Institute, Bard College. His recent publications include "Nonlinear Dynamics and Pseudo-Production Functions" (in The Eastern Economics Journal, 2004). Back To Top Even a Worldly Philosopher Needs a Good Mechanic Robert M. Solow [Read Solow's complete paper] Robert M. Solow is
Institute Professor Emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. He received the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1987 for his
theory of growth. His books include A Critical Essay on Modern
Macroeconomics Theory (with Hahn, 1995) and The Labor Market as a
Social Institution (1990).
Do Only Economic Illiterates Argue That Trade Can Destroy Jobs and Lower America's National Income? Lester C. Thurow [Read Thurow's complete paper] Lester C. Thurow is a
professor of economics and management at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and has been the Dean of the Sloan School of Business at
MIT. His latest book is Fortune Favors the Bold: What We Must Do to
Build a New and Lasting Global Prosperity (2003).
|
| Table of Contents | Back to the Top |