 | Evolutionary economics: Encyclopedia II - Evolutionary economics - Predecessors of evolutionary economics
Evolutionary economics - Predecessors of evolutionary economics
Karl Marx began in the mid-19th century with his schema of stages of historical development, by introducing the notion that "human nature" was not constant and was not determinative of the nature of the social system; on the contrary, he made it a principle that human behavior was a function of the social and economic system in which it occurred.
At approximately the same time, Darwin developed a general framework for comprehending any process whereby small, random variations could be accumulated over time and under the urgings of economic forces into large-scale changes that resulted in the emergence of wholly novel forms ("speciation").
This was followed shortly after by the work of the American pragmatic philosophers (James, Peirce, Dewey) and the founding of two new disciplines, psychology and anthropology, both of which were oriented toward cataloging and developing explanatory frameworks for the variety of behavior patterns (both individual and collective) that were becoming increasingly obvious to all systematic observers. The state of the world converged with the state of the evidence to make almost inevitable the development of a more modern framework for the analysis of substantive economic issues.
Thorstein Veblen began his career in the midst of this period of intellectual ferment, and as a young scholar came into direct contact with some of the leading figures of the various movements that were to shape the style and substance of the newly-minted social sciences into the next century and beyond. Veblen saw the need for taking account of cultural variation in his approach; no universal "human nature" could possibly be invoked to explain the variety of norms and behaviors that the new science of anthropology showed to be the rule, rather than the exception. His singular analytical contribution was what came to be known as the "ceremonial / instrumental dichotomy"; Veblen saw that every culture is materially-based and dependent on tools and skills to support the "life process", while at the same time, every culture appeared to have a stratified structure of status ("invidious distinctions") that ran entirely contrary to the imperatives of the "instrumental" (read: "technological") aspects of group life. The "ceremonial" was related to the past, and conformed to and supported the tribal legends; "instrumental" was oriented toward the technological imperative to judge value by the ability to control future consequences. The "Veblenian dichotomy" was a specialized variant of the "instrumental theory of value" due to John Dewey, with whom Veblen was to make contact briefly at the University of Chicago.
The most important works by Veblen include, but are not restricted to, his most famous works (Theory of the Leisure Class; Theory of Business Enterprise), but his monograph Imperial Germany and the Industrial Revolution and the essay entitled Why Economics is not an Evolutionary Science have both been influential in shaping the research agenda for following generations of social scientists. TOLC and TOBE together constitute an alternative construction on the neoclassical marginalist theories of consumption and production, respectively. Both are clearly founded on the application of the "Veblenian dichotomy" to cultural patterns of behavior, and are therefore implicitly but unavoidably bound to a critical stance; Veblen's theories cannot be well understood unless one grasps that the dichotomy is at its core a valuational principle. The ceremonial patterns of activity are not bound to just any past, but rather to the one that generated a specific set of advantages and prejudices that underly the current structure of rewards and power. Instrumental judgments create benefits according to an entirely separate criterion, and therefore are inherently subversive. This line of analysis was more fully and explicitly developed by Clarence E. Ayres of the University of Texas at Austin from the 1920s.
Joseph Schumpeter, who lived in the first half of 20th century, was the author of the book The Theory of Economic Development. In this book he proposed an idea radical for its time: The evolutionary perspective. He based his theory on the assumption of usual macroeconomic equilibrium, which is something like "the normal mode of economic affairs". This equilibrium is being perpetually destroyed by entreprenuers who try to introduce innovations. A successful introduction of an innovation disturbs the normal flow of economic life, because it forces some of the already existing technologies and means of production to lose their positions within the economy.
Kenneth Boulding was one of the advocates of the evolutionary methods in social science, as is evident from Kenneth Boulding's Evolutionary Perspective. Kenneth Arrow, Ronald Coase and Douglass North are some of the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel winners who are known by their sympathy to the field.
Other related archives1920s, 19th century, 20th century, Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, Charles Peirce, Creative destruction, Darwin, Darwinian, Darwinian evolutionary theory, Darwinism, Dewey, Douglass North, Ecological model of competition, Economics, Evolutionary, Institutional economics, James, Joseph Schumpeter, Karl Marx, Kenneth Arrow, Kenneth Boulding, Kenneth Boulding's Evolutionary Perspective, Kurt Dopfer, Natural selection, Newtonian, Peirce, Philip Mirowski, Physical economics, Ronald Coase, Social Darwinism, Thorstein Veblen, Ulrich Witt, University of Chicago, University of Texas at Austin, anthropology, axiomatics, bankrupt, biology, competition, complexity theories, differential calculus, economic, economic system, elasticity, emergence, empirical, entreprenuers, equilibrium, firms, human behavior, human nature, innovations, irreversible, knowledge, labour force, language, learning effects, macroeconomic, macroscopic, market share, markets, path dependence, perfect information, physics, preferences, principle of least action, psychology, random variations, rational agent, rational choice, routines, scarcity, selection, self-organization, self-replication, social sciences, social scientists, social system, speciation, technology, variation, velocity of money
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