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Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:18:47 2006 |
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First, a disclaimer--I'm not a historian of Economic Thought. Having owned
up, I'd like to suggest that the very interesting contributions to "why
teach..." ought to consider another aspect of this issue. I am a member of
an economics department that at one time had a history of thought course
required for Ph.D. students, but no longer has that requirement. There are
some particular "local" reasons for that (the retirement of a senior faculty
person,etc etc), but there is a broader issue associated with the demise of
the requirement. That broader issue strikes me as extremely relevant to "Why
Harvard [or wherever] does not teach History of Thought," and is not
well-captured by the specific wording of Womack's original query, or by many
of the responses. So this is a plea for consideration of this issue.
So here it is. The way Womack posed the grumpy Harvard claim "Why teach
error?" suggests that an answer be of the form "because we learn the
following useful things by studying error."(I'm ignoring Quinn's well-taken
point that HET is not just a study of error...)But that style of answer is
necessary to but insufficent for making the case for requiring a history of
thought course. Given the way economists view the world, making a case for a
required HET course for Ph.D. students requires NOT JUST that the course
have a positive yield ("teaches us useful things"), but that the yield is
higher than the most attractive foregone alternative use of course time. My
memory (which is sometimes flimsy) suggests that the loss of an HET
requirement at my university was based in large part on the argument that,
while HET was valuable, an additional semester requirement in Econometrics
had a distinctly higher yield for our current students.
By the way, whatever the true unstylized facts are about what med schools do
or do not require, it surely must be the case that a telling argument about
whether or not history of medicine should be required would depend on the
yield from studying that versus the yield from the course being "displaced."
"Just" showing that there is a positive yield (not counting opportunity
cost) of studying history of medicine is simply insufficient to making a
really strong case for teaching it. Even humanities-oriented medical types,
for example, might want to ponder the relative payoffs from "forcing" a
history of medicine requirement to that of "forcing" a medical ethics course
requirement....
Robert Goldfarb
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