The Reformation in Economics

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Reformation_in_Economics an entity of type: Thing

The Reformation in Economics is a book written by the Irish economist Philip Pilkington. It is a book that aims to deconstruct contemporary neoclassical economic theory in order to determine to what extent it is scientific and to what extent it is ideological. The book is divided into three sections: Ideology and Methodology, Stripped-Down Macroeconomics and Approaching the Real World. The first section of the book engages in a deconstruction of economic theory that seeks to weed out the ideological elements of economic theory while introducing a coherent methodology that allows for the reconstruction that follows. The second section lays out a theory of the macroeconomy that builds on the methodology described in the first section and tackles: money, prices, profits, income distribution, rdf:langString
rdf:langString The Reformation in Economics
rdf:langString The Reformation in Economics: A Deconstruction and Reconstruction of Economic Theory
rdf:langString The Reformation in Economics: A Deconstruction and Reconstruction of Economic Theory
xsd:string Palgrave Macmillan
xsd:integer 53003737
xsd:integer 1113037661
rdf:langString United Kingdom
xsd:integer 978
rdf:langString
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Print, Ebook
xsd:integer 358
xsd:integer 2016
rdf:langString The Reformation in Economics is a book written by the Irish economist Philip Pilkington. It is a book that aims to deconstruct contemporary neoclassical economic theory in order to determine to what extent it is scientific and to what extent it is ideological. The book is divided into three sections: Ideology and Methodology, Stripped-Down Macroeconomics and Approaching the Real World. The first section of the book engages in a deconstruction of economic theory that seeks to weed out the ideological elements of economic theory while introducing a coherent methodology that allows for the reconstruction that follows. The second section lays out a theory of the macroeconomy that builds on the methodology described in the first section and tackles: money, prices, profits, income distribution, income determination, investment and finance. The final section sketches out how such a theory should be applied to real-world empirical data, with a particular emphasis on the fact that working economists are faced with fundamental uncertainty and so applying their theories is not as simple or straightforward as applying theories in the hard sciences, like physics.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 11150
xsd:string 978-3-319-40756-2
xsd:positiveInteger 358

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