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Date: | Mon, 30 Mar 2009 20:17:40 -0400 |
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Roy: There is a history of how we came to be a profession that
thinks the competent practice of economics is quite independent of
knowledge of HET - unlike, eg, the practice of human studies. This
methodological norm, in other words, has a history. I agree with
Hegel that justifying a norm, showing that it is rational, is a
matter of giving a convincing historical account of how it came to be
held, an account that makes its adoption a solution
to inconsistencies that a prior set of norms for economic practice
runs into. So the current practice doesn't get justified - if it does
- essentialistically, as you say; but neither does it get justified
pragmatically, on Hegel's account. It gets justified, if it does get
justified," dialectically," where this term means nothing more than
what I've said above!
J. Kevin Quinn
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