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Philip Mirowski

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Philip Mirowski (born 21 August 1951 in Jackson, Michigan) is a historian and philosopher of economic thought at the University of Notre Dame. He received a PhD in Economics from the University of Michigan in 1979.[1]

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Transcription

Career

In his 1989 book More Heat than Light, Mirowski reveals a history of how physics has drawn inspiration from economics and how economics has sought to emulate physics, especially with regard to the theory of value. He traces the development of the energy concept in Western physics and its subsequent effect on the invention and promulgation of neoclassical economics, the modern orthodox theory. Mirowski's thesis has been challenged by Hal Varian and defended, with some reservations, by D. Wade Hands.[2]

Machine Dreams explores the historical influences of the military and the cyborg sciences on neoclassical economics. The neglected influence of John von Neumann and his theory of automata are key themes throughout the book. Mirowski claims that many of the developments in neoclassical economics in the 20th century, from game theory to computational economics, are the unacknowledged result of von Neumann's plans for economics. The work expands Mirowski's vision for a computational economics, one in which various market types are constructed in a similar fashion to Noam Chomsky's generative grammar. The role of economics is to explore how various market types perform in measures of complexity and efficiency, with more complicated markets being able to incorporate the effects of the less complex. By complexity Mirowski means something analogous to computational complexity theory in computer science.[citation needed] Mirowski's criticism of game theory is noted by financial economist and historian Peter L. Bernstein.[3]

In his book Never Let a Serious Crisis Go to Waste, Mirowski concludes that neoliberal thought has become so pervasive that any countervailing evidence serves only to further convince disciples of its ultimate truth. Once neoliberalism became a Theory of Everything, providing a revolutionary account of self, knowledge, information, markets, and government, it could no longer be falsified by anything as trifling as data from the "real" economy.[citation needed]

Books

As author

  • Against Mechanism: Protecting Economics from Science. Totowa, N.J.: Rowman & Littlefield, 1988. ISBN 978-0-8476-7436-7.
  • More Heat than Light: Economics as Social Physics, Physics as Nature's Economics Cambridge University Press, 1989 ISBN 0-521-42689-8
  • Machine Dreams: Economics Becomes a Cyborg Science Cambridge University Press, 2001 ISBN 0-521-77526-4
  • The Effortless Economy of Science?, Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2004, (papers 463 pp.) ISBN 0-8223-3310-4
  • Science-Mart: Privatizing American Science, Harvard University Press, 2011 ISBN 9780674046467
  • Never Let a Serious Crisis Go to Waste: How Neoliberalism Survived the Financial Meltdown Verso Books, 2013 ISBN 9781781680797
  • The Knowledge We Have Lost in Information: A History of Information and Knowledge in Economics (with E. Nik-Khah), Oxford University Press, 2017 ISBN 9780190270056

As editor

Notes

  1. ^ CV Archived 2008-10-07 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Hands, D. Wade (March 1992). "More Light and Less Heat: Mirowski on Economics and the Energy Metaphor" (PDF). Philosophy of the Social Sciences. 22 (1): 97–111. doi:10.1177/004839319202200106. S2CID 145182239.
  3. ^ Bernstein, Peter L. (1996). Against the Gods: The remarkable story of risk. New York: John Wiley & Sons. p. 245. ISBN 0-471-12104-5. OCLC 34411005.

External links

  • Homepage of Philip Mirowski
  • A long review of Machine Dreams at the Wayback Machine (archived May 27, 2009).
  • Review by Steven N. Durlauf of Mirowski's book The Effortless Economy of Science?
  • S. Abu Turab Rizvi: Philip Mirowski as a Historian of Economic Thought. In: Steven G. Medema, Warren J. Samuels (eds.): Historians of Economics and Economic Thought: The Construction of Disciplinary Memory. Routledge, London/New York 2001, pp. 209–222.
  • Don Ross, The Effortless Economy of Science?, The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, Vol. 60, Iss. 3, Sept. 2009, pp. 659–65.
This page was last edited on 13 April 2024, at 22:04
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