William Stanley Jevons and the making of modern economics
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
William Stanley Jevons and the making of modern economics
(Historical perspectives on modern economics)
Cambridge University Press, 2010, c2005
- : pbk
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Note
Originally published: 2005
Originally presented as the author's thesis
Includes bibliographical references (p. 291-318) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Victorian polymath William Stanley Jevons (1835-82) is generally and rightly venerated as one of the great innovators of economic theory and method in what came to be known as the 'marginalist revolution'. This book is an investigation into the cultural and intellectual resources that Jevons drew upon to revolutionize research methods in economics. Jevons's uniform approach to the sciences was based on a firm belief in the mechanical constitution of the universe and a firm conviction that all scientific knowledge was limited and therefore hypothetical in character. Jevons's mechanical beliefs found their way into his early meteorological studies, his formal logic, and his economic pursuits. By using mechanical analogies as instruments of discovery, Jevons was able to bridge the divide between theory and statistics that had become more or less institutionalized in mid nineteenth-century Britain.
Table of Contents
- 1. The prying eyes of the natural scientist
- 2. William Stanley Jevons: Victorian polymath
- 3. The black arts of induction
- 4. Mimetic experiments
- 5. Engines of discovery
- 6. The machinery of the mind
- 7. The private laboratory of the mind
- 8. The laws of human enjoyment
- 9. Timing history
- 10. Balancing acts
- 11. The image of economics.
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