
Contents
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The Doux-Commerce Thesis The Doux-Commerce Thesis
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The Self-Destruction Thesis The Self-Destruction Thesis
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Eclipse of the Doux-Commerce Thesis after the Eighteenth Century Eclipse of the Doux-Commerce Thesis after the Eighteenth Century
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The Feudal-Shackles Thesis The Feudal-Shackles Thesis
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America, or the Perils of Not Having a Feudal Past America, or the Perils of Not Having a Feudal Past
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Toward a Tableau Idéologique Toward a Tableau Idéologique
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Bibliographical References Bibliographical References
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Notes Notes
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Rival Views of Market Society
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Published:October 2013
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Abstract
This chapter tackles the core vocabulary of economics: if there is to be an expanded economics, it would need a more complex vocabulary or discourse. This would also mean giving up one of the sacred cows of the discipline: the preference for parsimony—simple explanations of more complicated phenomena—so simple they can be more easily tested under conditions of the intellectual's making. Doing this might allow economists to admit otherwise forbidden topics for analysis—like love, avarice, and jealousy. Hirschman anticipates, in this sense, the importance of bridging the divide between emotions and behavior. To conclude, the chapter examines whether the various complications have some element in common.
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