To me, the discussion of HET is fascinating because we have somewhat
the same issue in political science. For most of my academic life,
the history of political philosophy has been relegated to the
backwaters of those departments strongest in political science. (I
would say that the history of political philosophy has probably never
been relegated nation-wide as badly as HET [& that is probably true
is Australia, too], but then again political science has almost never
been able to claim the scientific and theoretical rigor and insight
of economics.)
I think that there are probably parallels, with significant
differences in emphasis, among physics, economics, and political
science. If you want to do *real* political science, you don't have
to know the history of political thought -- at least, not until
people start raising questions about your assumptions, including your
normative assumptions, and how your assumptions bias your conclusions
or goals. If you want to do *real* economics, HET is irrelevant --
until you start to realize that contemporary economics, while it may
have a formal definition of 'recession,' does not have a formal
definition of 'depression' (because contemporary economics,
obviously, was going to make it so that depressions do not exist; so
if you want to understand what is happening now, you need HET). If
you want to do *real* physics (experimental physics), then the
history of physics does not matter; but it does matter if you are
trying to come up with some sort of unified theory of the universe,
among relativity & quantum physics, in which case you need the
history of physics.
Peter G. Stillman
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