Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology

Including a Symposium on Religion, the Scottish Enlightenment, and the Rise of Liberalism

Luca Fiorito|Scott Scheall|Carlos Eduardo Suprinyak
Emerald
Emerald

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Hardback
9781804559796
27 March 2023
£85.00
  • Description
  • Contents
  • About

Volume 41A of Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology features a symposium on “Religion, the Scottish Enlightenment, and the Rise of Liberalism,” a new research essay by Syed Mohib Ali, and a roundtable on the institutionalist economics of Geoffrey Hodgson.

PART I: A Symposium on Religion, the Scottish Enlightenment, and the Rise of Liberalism; Jordan J. Ballor and Erik W. Matson

  • Chapter 1. Introduction to the Symposium: Religion, the Scottish Enlightenment, and the Rise of Liberalism; Jordan J. Ballor and Erik W. Matson
  • Chapter 2. Believing, Belonging and Understanding: Religion and Philosophy as Narratives and Practice in Adam Smith; Jimena Hurtado
  • Chapter 3. Adam Smith and Religious Mercantilism; Maria Pia Paganelli
  • Chapter 4. The Quest for Adam Smith’s Theodicy; Paul Oslington
  • Chapter 5. The Circumstantiality of Bivariate Relationships in The Theory of Moral Sentiments; Daniel B. Klein
  • Chapter 6. The Anthropology of Liberalism: Smith and Us; Christina McRorie
  • Chapter 7. Opposing Sketches of the Clergy as Literati during the Scottish Enlightenment: Hugh Blair and John Witherspoon; Paul D. Mueller
  • PART II: Essay
  • Chapter 8. Description as Theory: Sen and Sraffa; Syed Mohib Ali
  • PART III: Roundtable on Geoffrey Hodgson's "Discovering Institutionalism: One Person's Journey"
  • Chapter 9. Discovering Institutionalism: One Person’s Journey; Geoffrey Hodgson
  • Chapter 10. Geoffrey Hodgson’s Institutional Economics: Veblenian Origins and Beyond; Felipe Almeida
  • Chapter 11. Can Institutional Economics Still Fascinate Scholars?; Angela Ambrosino
  • Chapter 12. Why is Geoffrey Hodgson So Important for Institutional and Evolutionary Economics? Some Personal Views; Olivier Brette
  • Chapter 13. Geoffrey Hodgson: An Institutionalist's Institutionalist; Daniel H. Cole
  • Chapter 14. Comment on “Discovering Institutionalism: One Person’s Journey” by Geoff Hodgson; Richard N. Langlois
  • Chapter 15. Learning Economics. Discovering Geoff Hodgson; Alain Marciano
  • Chapter 16. The Three Scientific Faults in Some Neo-Institutionalism; Deirdre McCloskey

Luca Fiorito received his PhD in economics from the New School for Social Research in New York and is currently Professor at the University of Palermo. His main area of interest is the history of American economic thought in the Progressive Era and the interwar years.

Scott Scheall is Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Social Science in Arizona State University’s College of Integrative Sciences and Arts. He has published extensively on topics related to the history and philosophy of the Austrian School of economics.

Carlos Eduardo Suprinyak is Associate Professor of Economics at the American University of Paris. He specializes in the history of political economy, exploring the intersections between economics and politics in different historical contexts, from early modern England to Cold War Latin America.