£87.99 Regular price
Unit price
per 

Seven Essays on the Genealogy of Uncertainty

Title: Seven Essays on the Genealogy of Uncertainty
Subject Classification:  Economics and Finance, Philosophy  
BIC Classification: KC, HP
BISAC Classification: BUS023000, PHI041000, BUS069030
Binding: Hardback, eBook
Publication date: 30 Sep 2024
ISBN (Hardback): 978-1-80441-698-3
ISBN (eBook): 978-1-80441-699-0

 

To view a sample of the book, please click here

 

e-books available for libraries from   Proquest  and   EBSCO   with non-institutional availability from  GooglePlay

For larger orders, or orders where you require an invoice, contact us  admin@ethicspress.com

Description

Uncertainty is critical to economic theory, mainly because it either supports, or undermines, many significant debates within economic theory.

Despite the significance of uncertainty, this book represents the first attempt to comprehensively trace the genealogy of uncertainty, which is a procedure that Nietzsche used in relation to morality; one of the subjects that become logically redundant in the absence of uncertainty. On the one hand, this logical redundancy is problematic when considered in isolation, given the practical importance of morality. On the other hand, this logical redundancy becomes even more problematic, given that, at one time, uncertainty was widely accepted as an important part of the philosophical system. Here uncertainty played a pivotal role, in terms of explaining practical decision-making.

Such an appreciation of uncertainty has recently been set aside by modern philosophy, which argues quantities of human labour provide virtually all economic value. Such an explanation of economic value excludes uncertainty, the many qualitative contributions of nature, and morality, even when one acknowledged the contribution to the understanding of uncertainty, as proposed by Frank Knight, in 1921.

However, in contrast to Knight, who looked toward recent philosophy so as to support the existence of uncertainty, this genealogy looks to support the significance of uncertainty by understanding the philosophy that supported the idea of uncertainty for thousands of years, before the philosophy of John Locke. Specifically, Locke excludes uncertainty from the analysis of practical decision-making in general, and from economic decision-making in particular.

Accordingly, it can be anticipated that the enclosed genealogy will assist economists to more adequately develop the idea of uncertainty within economic theory.

Biography

Author(s):  Stephen Nash is an accomplished Chief Investment Officer and economist, being a Cambridge Commonwealth Trust Scholar, who has published extensively on philosophy, economics, and the economics of Frank Knight, as it relates to the idea of uncertainty. Liza Rybak is an academic at Macquarie University Law School. They are both based in Sydney, Australia.

Reviews

"What will happen? For all its models and concepts modern economics cannot deal with uncertainty. In his path-making book Stephen Nash addresses this obvious feature of human life, showing that economics tried to escape the sovereignty of philosophy and forgot its debt to John Locke. His book is original and fundamental, and it is wise and well-argued."
- Harvey C. Mansfield, Research Professor of Government, Harvard University, USA

"Since J. M. Keynes and F. H. Knight brought the uncertainty concept into economics in two separate publications in 1921, a great deal has been written on the topic, despite it being outside the mainstream approach to economic theory. In this fascinating book, Stephen J. Nash and Liza J. Rybak argue that for the uncertainty concept to be incorporated, first its philosophical origins must be understood. Then fundamental change is required in economics itself."
- Geoffrey M Hodgson, Emeritus Professor in Management at Loughborough University London, UK

Recently Viewed

Sign up for our newsletter
No thanks

Availability