ABSTRACT

The major methodological task for modern economists has been to establish the testability of models. Too often, however, methodological assumptions can make a model virtually impossible to test even under ideal conditions, yet few theorists have examined the requirements and problems of assuring testability in economics.

In The Methodology of Economic Model Building, first published in 1989, Lawrence Boland presents the results of a research project that spanned more than twenty years. He examines how economists have applied the philosophy of Karl Popper, relating methodological debates about falsifiability to wider discussions about the truth status of models in natural and social sciences. He concludes that model building in economics reflects more the methodological prescriptions of the economist Paul Samuelson than Popper’s ‘falsificationism’. This title will prove invaluable to both students and researchers, and represents a substantial contribution to debates about the scientific status of economics.

chapter |14 pages

Prologue

Methodology vs Applied Methodology

part I|70 pages

Applications of the Popper-Samuelson Demarcation

part II|32 pages

Popper-Samuelson Demarcation vs the Truth Status of Models

part III|50 pages

Exploring the Limits of the Popper-Samuelson Demarcation