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Humane Economics : Essays in Honor of Don Lavoie

High, Jack(Edited by)
Part of the New Thinking in Political Economy Series series
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Don Lavoie's published work encompasses a wide range of subjects - socialism, hermeneutics, information technology, and culture.

The subjects appear unrelated, but a close examination of his research reveals an underlying unity of thought and an economics at sharp variance with the post World War II mainstream.

The contributors to this volume explore the legacy of his scholarship and its implications for economics.

Three themes run throughout Don Lavoie's work and are explored in these chapters, the overarching one being the importance of social intelligence to economics.

Second, and related to this, was his belief that certain institutions or practices are better at creating social intelligence than others - what might be termed the primacy of liberty or voluntaryism.

Thirdly, he asserted that economics is more closely aligned with the humane disciplines than with the physical.

As these essays make clear, if the next generation of economists does integrate economics with the humanities, some of the credit must go to Don Lavoie.

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£121.00
Product Details
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
1845425111 / 9781845425111
Hardback
330.092
01/10/2006
United Kingdom
English
x, 324 p. : ill.
24 cm
research & professional Learn More