ABSTRACT

Researchers are expected to produce original findings, yet nobody explains how original contributions are conceived in economics. Recently there have been calls for more creativity in economic research, yet there is no literature that explores creative research apart from collections of biographical essays. This book aims to address that gap, exploring the process of conceiving and generating ideas for interesting and original research contributions in economics (and potentially other social sciences too).

Creative Research in Economics serves both a practical and theoretical purpose. Theoretically it presents a unique way of thinking about the nature of problems and questions in economics and the role of social science researchers in society. As such it offers an interesting way to think about the philosophy of science and methodology in economics, and how new ideas emerge in the discipline. Practically it develops techniques for finding interesting and original research contributions (as opposed to conventional data-gathering research).

Whether you are a graduate student looking for that first interesting question, a novice researcher in search of fresh avenues for research after your PhD, or a seasoned academic looking to teach the philosophy and methodology of economics in more interesting ways, you will find this book of great use.

chapter 1|14 pages

The possibility of systematic originality

chapter 2|18 pages

Originality in social science research

chapter 4|11 pages

Originality through questions

chapter 5|20 pages

Reasoning towards new ideas

chapter 6|24 pages

Rational reconstruction from case studies

chapter 7|25 pages

Dealing with authentic economic problems

chapter 8|29 pages

An instructional programme

chapter 9|5 pages

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