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From:
[log in to unmask] (D. Wade Hands)
Date:
Fri Mar 31 17:18:43 2006
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----------------- HES POSTING ----------------- 
CALL FOR PAPERS 
2005 Duke HOPE Conference 
Agreement on Demand: 
The History of 20th Century Demand Theory 
 
Philip Mirowski and D. Wade Hands 
April 22-24, 2005 Duke University 
 
While many broad statements have been made concerning the nature and causes 
of the transformation of the microeconomic orthodoxy in America in WWII and 
after by the participants, there has been very little work by historians 
evaluating their generalizations and proposing their own narratives. The 
purpose of this conference is to redirect the skills, attention and 
competencies of some intellectual historians and some historically-inclined 
economists to explore the trajectory of a (probably the) key component of 
neoclassical microeconomics, viz., demand theory, primarily but not 
exclusively of the American variety, from roughly the 1930s through to the 
end of the century. While this implicitly selects the Walrasian general 
equilibrium tradition and Nash game theory as primary foci of attention at 
the conference, we shall seek to pose a number of questions about the 
orthodoxy that would transcend the few existing accounts that treat those 
developments as obvious extrapolations of pre-1930s neoclassical price 
theory. It seems now accepted that only in the central decades of the 20th 
century did economists stabilize their referents to the theory of demand. 
These questions would include the following: How significant in practice 
was the role of the Walrasian tradition (versus, say, the Marshallian) in 
the rise of the American orthodoxy in demand theory? How did the boundaries 
of 'the market' and hence the subject matter of economics come to be 
platted so distinctively in the US and elsewhere? To what extent was the 
"Law of Demand" held to be an explicitly neoclassical proposition? How 
should one understand the frequent repudiations of psychology throughout 
the period? How did the actual process of exchange become downplayed, and 
later revived? How did a program subscribing to the centrality of the 
individual come to endorse a generic undifferentiated conception of agency? 
What was the significance of the shift of the governing image of the market 
to that of an information processor? 
 
While these tend to be quasi-philosophical questions, we are also looking 
for detailed historical investigations into topics like: 
Was there a distinctive tradition at mid-century of price theory at 
Chicago, MIT, Cowles and elsewhere? What happened to them? 
What were the implications of the Sonnenschein/Mantel/Debreu theorems, the 
no-trade theorems, the Scarf counterexample, and other 'anomalies' 
generated within the period? 
What were the reactions to 'rationality-free' attempts to provide 
alternative grounding for the law of demand, such as efforts by Gary 
Becker, Werner Hildenbrand, William Starbuck, Alan Kirman, and others? 
Did the various attempts at large-scale structural econometric estimation 
of demand systems erode support for the program? 
Was the mid-century Walrasian orthodoxy more concerned with 'equilibrium' 
than with the process aspects of exchange, and did developments like the 
'microstructure' literature in finance or the Smithian program within 
experimental economics serve to change this? 
What happened to research agendas in demand theory such as the 'atomless 
agents' approach, the mechanism design literature, the Carnegie simulation 
approach, and others? To what extent did these programs or others tend to 
alter the notion of 'agency'? 
Has the modern movement to produce 'designer markets' (FCC auctions, 
specialized e-commerce markets, emissions trading) altered the 
configuration of demand theory? 
Was the 'Ordinal Revolution' really so very revolutionary? How did the 
vicissitudes of 'welfare economics' feed back on the evolution of demand 
theory? 
To what extent did the "consistency revolution" associated with the 
revealed preference theory of Samuelson and others constitute a revolution 
in demand theory? 
What effect did the American neoclassical orthodoxy have upon indigenous 
schools of demand theory in other countries? 
 
The purpose of this conference is to convene interested parties who possess 
a dual commitment to work through the history of some technical issues, but 
also a willingness to discuss the larger implications of these developments 
both for economists and their clientele. 
 
The conference will take place at Duke University, Durham, NC, on April 
22-24. Proposals for papers (1000 words maximum) should be sent to both the 
organizers (contact information below). Papers will be selected and authors 
notified by September 30, 2004. In keeping with the Duke tradition, all 
conference sessions are plenary and presentations will be limited in number 
and allotted time to allow for maximum discussion. Papers will be 
circulated in advance, and therefore drafts must be delivered to the 
organizers no later than March 1, 2005. Following the conference, papers 
will be selected and refereed for inclusion in a special supplement to 
History of Political Economy, published in hardcover volume by Duke 
University Press. Participation in the conference entails conceding first 
refusal rights for publication to the editors and HOPE. 
 
For further information, or to submit a proposal, please contact Philip 
Mirowski, 400 Decio Hall, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 
46554, tel. 574-631-7580 (email [log in to unmask] ) and D. Wade Hands, 
Department of Economics, University of Puget Sound, Tacoma, WA, 98416, 
253-879-3592 (email [log in to unmask]). 
 
D. Wade Hands 
University of Puget Sound 
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