Economic methodology is the study of methods, especially the scientific method, in relation to economics, including principles underlying economic reasoning. In contemporary English, 'methodology' may reference theoretical or systematic aspects of a method (or several methods). Philosophy and economics also takes up methodology at the intersection of the two subjects.

Scope

General methodological issues include similarities and contrasts to the natural sciences and to other social sciences and, in particular, to:

Economic methodology has gone from periodic reflections of economists on method to a distinct research field in economics since the 1970s. In one direction, it has expanded to the boundaries of philosophy, including the relation of economics to the philosophy of science and the theory of knowledge. In another direction of philosophy and economics, additional subjects are treated including decision theory and ethics.

See also

Notes

  • John Bryan Davis, D. Wade Hands, Uskali Mäki (1998). Handbook of Economic Methodology, E. Elgar
  • Hands, D. Wade, ed. (1993). The Philosophy And Methodology Of Economics, Duke University
  • Hausman, Daniel M. (1984). . New York: Cambridge University Press, ISBN052145929X
  • Boland, L. (1982) The Foundations of Economic Method, London: Geo. Allen & Unwin.
  • Boland, L. (1989) , London: Routledge.
  • Boland, L. (1997) , London: Routledge
  • Boland, L. (2003) The Foundations of Economic Method: A Popperian Perspective, London: Routledge
  • D.N. McCloskey (1983). , Univ of Wisconsin Press, 1998
  • Daniel M. Hausman (1992). , Cambridge University Press, 1992
  • Nell, E.J. and Errouaki, K. (2011) Rational Econometric Man. Edward Elgar.
  • Düppe, T. (2011). , Journal of Economic Methodology, 18 (2): 163-176.

External links

  • - page @ EconPapers
  • Daniel M. Hausman, (with focus on methodology), Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • Milton Friedman, (excerpts)