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Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:18:55 2006 |
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==================== HES POSTING ======================
My name is Lawrence Boland and I teach economic methodology and theory at
Simon Fraser University, located in Burnaby, B.C. Canada.
Some members of this list will have seen one or more of my five books and
fifty-four articles. A complete list of my publications is on my web page
<http://www.sfu.ca/~boland>. On that page there are links to free copies
of my first two books (1982 and 1986) and to pre-print drafts of three of
my recent articles concerning how economists interpret Karl Popper (all in
Adobe's pdf format). My 1965 PhD thesis was concerned with methodology
decisions made by economic model builders and it was published as Chapters
2 and 3 of my 1989 book.
My research falls into two related categories: economic methodology and
applied methodology. In the first category, my research agenda is to
convince economists that the core of Popper's view of science is not
"falsifiability" but systematic criticism. And furthermore, to get
economists to recognize that Paul Samuelson is responsible for the
promotion of falsificationism, not Popper. This agenda was the stimulus
for the epilogue in my 1989 book.
In the second category, my research agenda involves applying Popper's
epistemology to economic theory. It focuses on the knowledge requirements
of microeconomic decision making. Despite Hayek's recognition (60 years
ago) of the need to be explicit about the decision maker's knowledge and
despite Popper's convincing critiques of inductivist's epistemology,
economists continue to presume a theory of knowledge that is at least 350
years old and, moreover, one that was refuted by Hume 200 years ago. I
began this research with my first two books.
I am willing to communicate with any students or researchers who are
interested in these two research agendas.
============ FOOTER TO HES POSTING ============
For information, send the message "info HES" to [log in to unmask]
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