Chicago Fundamentalism: Ideology and Methodology in Economics
Book Details
Description
In this collection of previously published and new material, Craig Freedman examines the problem of ideology through the reflection cast by the architects of the Chicago counter-revolution, George Stigler and Milton Friedman. The second half of the volume demonstrates the legacy of these ideological fires, namely a profession where the methodology of careless reading and zero-sum exchanges have persisted and come to dominate.
Contents: Foreword: A Touch of the Billy Joels; And Only I Was Left to Tell the Tale: Blindness as an Act of Will; Resurrecting the Chicago Revolution: The Cold War and the Economics Profession:; George Stigler:; George Joseph Stigler (1911-1991); Power Without Glory -- George Stigler s Market Leviathan; Five Easy Pieces -- George Stigler s Blueprint for a Counter-Revolution; Countervailing Egos -- Stigler versus Galbraith; Was George Stigler Adam Smith s Best Friend? -- Studying the History of Economics Thought; Do Great Economists Make Great Teachers? -- George Stigler as a Dissertation Supervisor; Milton Friedman:; De Mortuis Nil Nisi Bonum -- Milton Friedman 1912-2006; Entre Nous -- A Review of the Friedman Stigler Correspondence; Not for Love nor Money: Milton Friedman s Counter-Revolution; Method or Madness -- Why Methodology Matters:; Why Economists Can t Read; Shunning the Frumious Bandersnatch: An Unacknowledged Assumption of Coase s Theorem; Animal Spirits in His Soup: A Look at the Methodology and Rhetoric of The General Theory; In Defence of Footnotes -- A Clarification of a Misunderstanding of Keynes s Definition of Money; Economic Convictions and Prior Beliefs: Akerlof Wrestles with the Ghost of John Maynard Keynes; When Truth is Not Beauty, Nor Beauty Truth: A Review of Econ Art -- Divorcing Art from Science in Modern Economics; Court Jesters, House Gadflies and Economic Critics.
