Humanism Challenges Materialism in Economics and Economic History
Humanism Challenges Materialism in Economics and Economic History
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Abstract
The essays in this volume argue that an exploration of economic outcomes must include an examination of the values, beliefs, and norms that enabled them. They emphasize humanistic perspectives of economic well-being and explore the pivotal role of changing values and beliefs in shaping economic history. A more humanistic economics can also re-enchant contemporary politics and policy making. In challenging the dominant economic paradigm, the insights from low-powered economic reasoning are acknowledged and enriched through multiple ways of knowing. Written by distinguished scholars of economics, history, philosophy, politics, gender studies and communications, the essays embrace the intellectual pluralism of Deirdre N. McCloskey.
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Front Matter
- Introduction
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1
Philanthropic Endeavors, Saving Behavior, and Bourgeois Virtues
Richard Sutch
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2
Queering McCloskey’s Feminism in Location and History
Robin L. Bartlett
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3
The Spread of Pro- and Anticapitalist Beliefs
Stanley L. Engerman
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4
Following in the Path of Deirdre McCloskey: The Lutheran Ethic and the Nordic Spirit of Social Democracy
Robert H. Nelson
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5
Economics with Varying Values: McCloskey’s Humanism and Fundamental Insights
Jack A. Goldstone
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6
Liberal Advocacy and Neoliberal Rule: On McCloskey’s Ambivalence
Stephen G. Engelmann
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7
Economics as the Conversation about the Conversation of the Market
Peter J. Boettke andVirgil Henry Storr
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8
Rhetoric and Public Policy: Pathos, Ideology, and the Specter of Health Care
Paul Turpin
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9
Humanism, Materialism, and Epistemology: Rhetoric of Economics as Styles in Action
John S. Nelson
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10
McCloskey at Chicago
Steven E. Landsburg
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End Matter
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