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      Book

      Measurement, Quantification and Economic Analysis
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      Book

      Measurement, Quantification and Economic Analysis

      DOI link for Measurement, Quantification and Economic Analysis

      Measurement, Quantification and Economic Analysis book

      Numeracy in Economics

      Measurement, Quantification and Economic Analysis

      DOI link for Measurement, Quantification and Economic Analysis

      Measurement, Quantification and Economic Analysis book

      Numeracy in Economics
      Edited ByIngrid H. Rima
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 1995
      eBook Published 16 February 1995
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203031056
      Pages 480
      eBook ISBN 9780203031056
      Subjects Economics, Finance, Business & Industry
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      Rima, I.H. (Ed.). (1995). Measurement, Quantification and Economic Analysis: Numeracy in Economics (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203031056

      ABSTRACT

      Most economists assume that the mathematical and quantative sides of their science are relatively recent developments. Measurement, Quantification and Economic Analysis shows that this is a misconception. Its authors argue that economists have long relied on measurement and quantification as essential tools.
      However, problems have arisen in adapting these tools from other fields. Ultimately, the authors are sceptical about the role which measurement and quantification tools now play in contemporary economic theory.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter 1|21 pages

      From political arithmetic to game theory

      An introduction to measurement and quantification in economics
      ByIngrid H. Rima

      chapter 2|9 pages

      “I have no great faith in political arithmetick”

      Adam Smith and quantitative political economy
      ByRobert W. Dimand

      chapter 3|32 pages

      Ordering society

      The early uses of classification in the British statistical organizations
      ByJames P. Henderson

      chapter 4|24 pages

      Measurement in utility calculations

      The utilitarian perspective
      BySandra J. Peart

      chapter 5|11 pages

      Institutional origins of econometrics

      Nineteenth-century business practices
      ByJudy L. Klein

      chapter 6|42 pages

      The method of diagrams and the black arts of Inductive economics

      ByJudy L. Klein

      chapter 7|17 pages

      Jevons versus Cairnes on exact economic laws

      ByJinbang Kim

      chapter 8|19 pages

      A reconstruction of Henry L.Moore’s demand studies

      ByNancy J. Wulwick

      chapter 9|12 pages

      The probability approach to index number theory

      Prelude to macroeconomics
      ByRobert E. Prasch

      chapter 10|10 pages

      The indicator approach to monitoring business fluctuations:

      A case study in dynamic statistical methods
      ByPhilip A. Klein

      chapter 11|14 pages

      The delayed emergence of econometrics as a separate discipline

      ByS. Ambirajan

      chapter 12|18 pages

      Some conundrums about the place of econometrics in economic analysis

      ByIngrid H. Rima

      chapter 13|15 pages

      The right person, in the right place, at the right time

      How mathematical expectations came into macroeconomics
      ByBradley W. Bateman

      chapter 14|17 pages

      The New Classical macroeconomics

      A case study in the evolution of economic analysis
      BySherryl D. Kasper

      chapter 15|17 pages

      Experimenting with neoclassical economics

      A critical review of experimental economics
      ByShaun Hargreaves Heap, Yanis Varoufakis

      chapter 16|26 pages

      The Carnot engine and the working day

      ByMurray Wolfson

      chapter 17|13 pages

      The problem of interpersonal interaction: Pareto’s approach

      ByVincent J. Tarascio

      chapter 18|15 pages

      Is emotive theory the philosopher’s stone of the ordinalist revolution?

      ByJohn B. Davis

      chapter 19|32 pages

      If empirical work in economics is not severe testing, what is it?

      ByRobert S. Goldfarb

      chapter 20|14 pages

      Econometrics and the “facts of experience”

      ByJohn Smithin

      chapter 21|17 pages

      Simultaneous economic behavior under conditions of ignorance and historical time

      ByDonald W. Katzner

      chapter 22|10 pages

      Liapounov techniques in economic dynamics and classical thermodynamics

      A comparison
      ByRandall Bausor

      chapter 23|30 pages

      The Hamiltonian formalism and optimal growth theory

      ByNancy J. Wulwick

      chapter 24|17 pages

      The impact of John von Neumann’s method

      ByM. H. I. Dore
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