Economic Methodology, History and Pluralism: Expanding Economic Thought to Meet Contemporary Challenges pays tribute to Emeritus Professor Sheila Dow (University of Stirling, Scotland). This volume focusses on the contributions of Dow to economic methodology, pluralism and the history of economic thought. These explorations serve to underpin her ideas and theories on macroeconomics, banking and money.
Bringing together an impressive panel of contributors, the chapters in this work examine Dows writings on structured pluralism and schools of thought, meanings of open and closed systems, reflections on the relationship between economics and other sciences (both social and natural), the methodology of behavioural economics, as well as the political economy of the Scottish school of thought. The book challenges the foundations of the mainstream economics paradigm in a novel and holistic manner, seeking to advance thinking across Dows favoured discipline.
The essays in this collection provide thought-provoking reading for advanced students and scholars of economic methodology, the history of economic thought, heterodox economics and political economy. The book will also be valued by the economics profession at large, as it contains important elements and ideas concerning ethics, methodology and tolerance within economics as a discipline and as a profession.
Foreword by John E. King
Introduction: Sheila Dow as a Visionary Economics Scholar
Chapter 1: The Relation of Neoclassical Economics to other Disciplines: the case of Physics and Psychology
Stavros A. Drakopoulos
Chapter 2: Sheila Dows Open Systems Methodology
John B. Davis
Chapter 3: Categorisation, Criticism and Pluralism in Context: Open and Closed Systems And the Project of Mathematical Modelling in Modern Economics
Tony Lawson
Chapter 4: Dualism Revisited
Geoffrey M. Hodgson
Chapter 5: Naturalism and the new challenge to Sheila Dows schools-of-thought approach to economics
John Hart
Chapter 6: Infinite Regress Problems and the Methodologies of Behavioural Economics
Peter E. Earl
Chapter 7: Should equilibrium be abandoned by heterodox economists?
Victoria Chick
Chapter 8: Dow, Keynes and the Pragmatic Tradition: More in Common?
Jennifer Churchill
Chapter 9: Keynes in transition: 'The Economic Possibilities for Our Grandchildren
Jesper Jesperson
Chapter 10: Ethical Practice in Economics: Research, Policy Advice and Education
Paul Dalziel
Chapter 11: Sheila Dow as historian of economic thought: The Scottish political economy tradition
Robert McMaster
Chapter 12: The conditions under which Adam Smiths invisible hand operate
Christopher Torr
Chapter 13: Mary Theresa Rankin: A Monetary Economist in the Scottish Tradition of Political Economy
Robert W. Dimand
Chapter 14: David Hume as a Scottish Political Economist
Maria Pia Paganelli
Chapter 15: Sheila Dows body of work - Publications from 1980 to 2022