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The Methodology of Positive Economics: Reflections On The Milton Friedman Legacy

The Methodology of Positive Economics: Reflections On The Milton Friedman Legacy

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Uskali Mäki
Cambridge University Press, 8/6/2009
EAN 9780521686860, ISBN10: 0521686865

Paperback, 382 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm
Language: English

Milton Friedman's 1953 essay 'The methodology of positive economics' remains the most cited, influential, and controversial piece of methodological writing in twentieth-century economics. Since its appearance, the essay has shaped the image of economics as a scientific discipline, both within and outside of the academy. At the same time, there has been an ongoing controversy over the proper interpretation and normative evaluation of the essay. Perceptions have been sharply divided, with some viewing economics as a scientific success thanks to its adherence to Friedman's principles, others taking it as a failure for the same reason. In this book, a team of world-renowned experts in the methodology of economics cast new light on Friedman's methodological arguments and practices from a variety of perspectives. It provides the 21st century reader with an invaluable assessment of the impact and contemporary significance of Friedman's seminal work.

List of figures
List of tables
List of contributors
Preface
Part I. The Classical Essay in 20th Century Economic Methodology
The methodology of positive economics (1953) Milton Friedman
Part II. Reading and Writing a Classic
1. Reading the methodological essay in twentieth century economics
map of multiple perspectives Uskali Mäki
2. Early drafts of Friedman's methodology essay J. Daniel Hammond
3. Unrealistic assumptions and unnecessary confusions
rereading and rewriting F53 as a realist statement Uskali Mäki
Part III. Models, Assumptions, Predictions, Evidence
4. The influence of Friedman's methodological essay on economics Tom Mayer
5. Did Milton Friedman's methodology license the formalist revolution? D. Wade Hands
6. Appraisal of evidence in economic methodology Melvin Reder
7. The politics of positivism
disinterested predictions from interested agents David Teira Serrano and Jesús Zamora Bonilla
Part IV. Theoretical Context
Firm, Money, Expected Utility, Walras and Marshall
8. Friedman's 1953 essay and the marginalist controversy Roger Backhouse
9. Friedman (1953) in relation to theories of the firm Oliver Williamson
10. Friedman's selection argument revisited Jack Vromen
11. Expected utility and Friedman's risky methodology Chris Starmer
12. Friedman's methodological stance
causal realism Kevin D. Hoover
13. On the right side for the wrong reason
Friedman on the Marshall-Walras divide Michel De Vroey
Part V. Concluding Perspectives
14. The debate over F53 after 50 years Mark Blaug
15. Final word Milton Friedman
References
Index.

'Milton Friedman's 'The Methodology of Positive Economics' was arguably the most important methodological statement in twentieth-century economics. The essay encapsulated what it meant to be truly scientific in an age and a profession that took 'being truly scientific' very seriously. In celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of its publication, Uskali Mäki has assembled an impressive array of scholars to explore the essay from a wide variety of perspectives. He has done a superb job: the papers are uniformly substantive and informative. The volume is a fitting golden anniversary present to the profession.' Bruce Caldwell, University of North Carolina at Greensboro

'If economic methodologists had a bible, Friedman's 'The Methodology of Positive Economics' would be it. If economic methodologists had a Talmudic study of its bible, this book would be it. The book is insightful, thoughtful, and thought provoking. Who would have thought that after fifty years, there is still so much to say about Friedman's methodological essay? The book is necessary reading for anyone studying formal economic methodology.' David Colander, Middlebury College, Vermont