On some antecedents of behavioural economics

2021 ◽  
pp. 095269512110009
Author(s):  
Kristian Bondo Hansen ◽  
Thomas Presskorn-Thygesen

Since its inception in the late 1970s, behavioural economics has gone from being an outlier to a widely recognized yet still contested subset of the economic sciences. One of the basic arguments in behavioural economics is that a more realistic psychology ought to inform economic theories. While the history of behavioural economics is often portrayed and articulated as spanning no more than a few decades, the practice of utilizing ideas from psychology to rethink theories of economics is over a century old. In the first three decades of the 20th century, several mostly American economists made efforts to refine fundamental economic assumptions by introducing ideas from psychology into economic thinking. In an echo of contemporary discussions in behavioural economics, the ambition of these psychology-keen economists was to strengthen the empirical accuracy of the fundamental assumptions of economic theory. In this article, we trace, examine, and discuss arguments for and against complementing economic theorizing with insights from psychology, as found in economic literature published between 1900 and 1930. The historical analysis sheds light on issues and challenges associated with the endeavour to improve one discipline’s theories by introducing ideas from another, and we argue that these are issues and challenges that behavioural economists continue to face today.

2010 ◽  
pp. 301-322
Author(s):  
Vasilije Vranic

During the 20th century, the exact role and the scope of jurisdictional authority of the Ecumenical Patriarch was an object of attention of both theologians and historians. The problem of defining the Patriarch was reactualized through the intensification of conciliar negotiations of Orthodox Churches. The purpose of this article is to demonstrate that the pretensions of the Ecumenical Patriarch for universal jurisdiction over the entire Orthodox Diaspora, and the pretensions for the right of final arbitration in the ecclesial matters of the entire Orthodox communion, do not have a support in the Orthodox Ecclesiology. This will be argued in a historical analysis of the relevant prescriptions of the Eastern Orthodox Canon Law, which will be placed into the context of the history of the Christian Church, primarily of the Patristic period, since there disciplines play a vital role in the Orthodox understanding of Ecclesiological Tradition.


Author(s):  
Dariusz Stępkowski

The aim of the article is to analyse the meaning and use of the term “kształcenie” in the concepts of systematic pedagogy in 20th-century Poland. The study involved M. Foucault’s archaeological method and systematic problem-historical analysis. As a result, it was found that in the indicated period a change in the disciplinary assignment of the term “kształcenie” from systematic pedagogy to didactics occurred, which was accompanied by a shift in meaning towards the instrumentally perceived modelling of personality through school teaching. Identification and revision of this fact opens the possibility to reintroduce the term and concept of “kształcenie” to systematic Polish pedagogy as one of its two basic categories, next to “wychowanie” (upbringing).


Author(s):  
Roberta Millstein ◽  
Michael Dietrich ◽  
Robert A. Skipper

Evolutionary biology underwent several significant transformations in the period after 1930. While mid-century was dominated by the evolutionary synthesis and the professionalization of evolutionary biology, the second half of the 20th century saw evolutionary research diversifying and the domain of evolutionary phenomena expanded, especially in response to the rise of molecular biology. While what happened in 1950 may seem ancient to a contemporary evolutionary biologist, to a historian of biology the last half of the 20th century is recent history. Where the literature on Darwin could fill a bibliography by itself, the history of modern evolutionary biology is neither as extensive nor as comprehensive. Some topics such as the evolutionary synthesis and molecular evolution have a rich historical literature. Others such as cultural evolution or quantitative genetics still await further historical analysis: not because they are undeserving, but because they are just now becoming ripe for historical investigation. For the purposes of this article, we selected significant pieces of historical and some philosophical scholarship that address major developments in the history of evolutionary biology. We did not select so-called classic papers by evolutionary biologists or review papers written by biologists. Instead our focus was on evolutionary biology as it has been contextualized and discussed by historians who have often been seeking to address a range of non-biological issues regarding the nature and practice of science, and how different aspects of evolutionary biology reflect the time and place of their development.


2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. 643-664 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ron Harris

AbstractI investigate the historical development of limited liability – widely considered a cornerstone of the business corporation – and challenge the commonplace linear narratives about how limited liability evolved. I dismiss the claim that limited liability was invented with the very first joint-stock business corporations around 1600. I also reject the assertion that it became dominant with the limited liability acts of the mid-19th century. My argument is that it was only around 1800 that limited liability became a separate corporate attribute, distinct from legal personality, and that limited liability in the modern sense became a uniform attribute of all corporations only in the 20th century. Since corporations, stock markets and the corporate economy enjoyed a long and prosperous history well before limited liability in its modern sense became established and dominant, the economic theory of limited liability needs to be revisited. The paper opens a new set of conceptual, empirical and theoretical research questions, and points to new possibilities in terms of viable future liability regimes.


2016 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 50-56
Author(s):  
Seyfaddin Samandarov

The article investigates the ideas expressed about the development of steel industry in the economic literature of Azerbaijan during the first 10 years of Soviet power. The subject is of interest from different aspects. In terms of exploring the economic history, the history of the development of different sectors of the economy of the Republic of Azerbaijan, the ideas associated with the development of non-oil sector are important for the study of the history.


Author(s):  
Célestin Monga

Mainstream economists have promoted the idea of universally representative agents, which allows for simple modeling techniques to describe and predict human thinking and decision-making. Yet, there has been a debate in the economic literature on the existence of the rational “economic man” in Africa. The continent’s long history of oppression, its sub-optimal economic performance, and colonial fantasies, have contributed to the development of a discourse of otherness fed by prejudices. This chapter tackles some of these epistemological dilemmas and policy issues in that debate through a reconsideration of the basic principles of economics. A didactic approach is followed, popularized by Gregory Mankiw, and a list of ten principles different from the ones he proposed is produced. This chapter offers a series of counter-narratives to conventional economic thinking, and highlights how some of the recent developments in economics are consistent with analyses made in the study of Africa’s economic experience.


2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 13-22
Author(s):  
Olena Olshanska

The biblical aspects in Ukrainian economic literature of the 20th and 21st century and its preconditions in European economic litera­ture have been examined. The economic theory has been rethought in the context of Christian economic ethics. The 21st century is, in a way, a result of spirituality of the previous generations, and most of all Christian spirituality. A number of socio-economic researches (such as labor processes, the study of wealth and poverty features) have shown that within the existing paradigm of science it is almost impos­sible to explain their nature and patterns of operation. The develop­ment of Christian economic ethics may be just the impetus not only for fairly significant change in economic thinking, but also for the further development of public opinion in general.


2019 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
pp. 193-201
Author(s):  
Piotr T. Kwiatkowski ◽  
Jonathan Weber

The author of this essay deals with the specif‌icity of sociology in Poland, reaching for the book of Antoni Sułek A Mirror on the High Road. Chapters from the History of Social Research in Poland (2019). Chapters of this book taken as a set constitute a review of the key issues that Polish sociologists strived to tackle in the 20th century. For approximately half of the book (6 chapters) Sułek focuses on issues of Polish sociology from the mid-1950s to the turn of the 1990s: the f‌irst is the change of theoretical and methodological paradigms in Polish sociology in the second half of the 20th century; the second is the successes of Polish sociology, but also its weaknesses — the author devoted much space to the theoretical limitations that prevented sociologists from predicting the formation of Solidarity in 1980. The third topic is the historical analysis of surveys conducted in the last decade of communism — their reliability as well as social and political functions. Finally, Sułek’s vision of socially-involved sociology appears. The strength of such sociology lies in its methodology, with which specific phenomena can be correctly def‌ined, impartially analysed, and systematically investigated. And this in turn enables evidence-based debate and policy.


Author(s):  
Nancy Reagin ◽  
Anne Rubenstein

This essay kicks off the special historical issue of Transformative Works and Cultures by offering an overview of the ways in which fan communities have been studied by academic historians, and how fan studies has written the history of fan communities. The essay discusses historical work done by amateur fan historians throughout the 20th century; what academic historians can offer fan communities; why academic historians could benefit from studying fandoms as part of the history of popular culture; and what fan studies as a discipline might gain from a broader historical analysis of fandoms.


2018 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter DeScioli

AbstractThe target article by Boyer & Petersen (B&P) contributes a vital message: that people have folk economic theories that shape their thoughts and behavior in the marketplace. This message is all the more important because, in the history of economic thought, Homo economicus was increasingly stripped of mental capacities. Intuitive theories can help restore the mind of Homo economicus.


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