I would suggest that there are elements of good
sense in both sides of this discussion, but also
problematic bits. The history of economics has
plenty to say about the present economic
situation; in fact, I spent 90 minutes last night
talking to a room full of scientists about
exactly this. There are also several papers that
will be presented at this year’s HES conference
that bear on this subject. An understanding of
the history of ideas is of no less import for
dealing with the present than is understanding
the history of events. That said, there are
several problems with the position taken by
Kates. (I use him as an example because of the pithy statements he offers.)
“HET is part of economics proper or it is part of
the history and philosophy of science. I think it is the first.”
Why is this an either/or? I would think that it
could very well be both. In fact, I DO think that it is both.
“If, however, trying to use HET to think about
modern economic problems is not part and parcel
of what specialists in HET would be expected to do, then we really ought
to just pack up shop right now.”
“Part and parcel”? That means, an essential or
integral component of what an historian of
economics/economic thought does. This would deny
that it is legitimate to study the history of
economic thought for its own sake, as a branch of
intellectual history or the history of science. I
simply cannot accept so narrow a definition of
the legitimate province of the historian of economics.
There is also a certain amount of hubris in the
statement, re. mainstream economists, that “This
is where they need to be educated by us,” but the
problems go beyond that. Too often history of
economic thought takes the form of trying to use
the past to show contemporary economists they are
wrong. That is perfectly legitimate as a form of
scholarship, but I question whether it is
scholarship in the history of economic thought.
It USES the history of economic thought, but it
does not necessarily contribute to (and often
does not contribute to) our understanding of the
history of economic thought. And all of this is
apart from the fact that the context in which
these writers of the past wrotethe import of
which is shown in HET as intellectual
history/history of scienceis often very far
removed from present economic problems.
The distinction here is really between studying
the history of ideas and disciplines vs. using
that history toward a particular endwhether it
be to prop up what passes as the mainstream at
any given point in time, or to attack it (or the
equivalent on the policy front). There are
obviously plenty within our tribe who fall into
each camp, and some who fall into both. A third
way is to use the ideas of the past to help us
understand the presentwithout passing judgment.
The group working in that arena is much smaller.
I have great sympathy for the first and third of
these approaches, but not so much for the second.
I will stop short of suggesting what, among these
things, appropriately belongs in JHET, HOPE,
EJHET, etc. That is for editors and referees to judge.
Steve Medema
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