ABSTRACT

For over 2000 years, economics was studied in the West as a branch of ethics, or moral philosophy. Presently, though, few economists and no textbook in economic orthodoxy claim any close connection between economic science and philosophy. However, might the current ‘crises’ in economics, and in the economics profession have their deep roots in the separation of economics from philosophy and ethics? 

American pragmatism, among the various contemporary philosophic traditions, lends itself specially to dialogue with economics because of its view of philosophy as an instrument for solving the real, concrete problems of human life, both personal and social. The essays in this volume, drawing heavily on the tradition of pragmatism, suggest that the economic crises of our time (the 2008 collapse of real estate and finance markets) might not be merely technical in nature - that is, the result of faulty applications of economic tools by politicians and policy makers, based up conventional economic models - but also due to the faulty philosophical assumptions underlying those models. These essays suggest that the overcoming of our current economic crises requires that economists once again become moral philosophers, or that philosophers once again engage themselves in economic matters.  In either case, this volume aims to foster dialogue between the two disciplines and in that way, contribute to the improvement of contemporary economic life.

This book is suitable for those who study political economy, economic theory and economic philosophy. 

part I|48 pages

The crisis in philosophical and historical perspective

chapter 2|11 pages

On the shadow and the substance

Adam Smith, John Dewey, and the Great Recession

chapter 3|22 pages

John Dewey

A philosophy for times of crisis

part II|27 pages

The narrative and rhetoric of ‘crisis’

chapter 4|15 pages

Neopragmatist ethnocentric rhetoric on economic crisis

Richard Rorty and social amelioration by redescription

chapter 5|11 pages

If philosophers are so smart

The metaphor of ‘global economic crisis’

part III|48 pages

The economy of happiness and desire

chapter 7|11 pages

The hegemony of finance

Recognition and the capture of desire

chapter 8|16 pages

Deep capture

The hidden role of rationalizations, psychology, and corporate law, and what philosophy can do about it

part IV|27 pages

The efficiency of markets

chapter 9|16 pages

Pragmatic theory of information and the efficient market hypothesis

From philosophical ideas to traders’ behavior analyses

part V|37 pages

Looking beyond the crisis

chapter 11|14 pages

A pragmatist model of transforming urban inequalities

Creating livable cities in a time of crisis

chapter 12|22 pages

Deepening Piketty’s pragmatism

Hopeful leadings for democratic political economy