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Robert Leeson said:
> Let me rephrase: there exist between historians and historians of economic
> thought barriers of language and training that do not exist in economics
> departments. In addition to producing high-quality historical scholarship,
> historians of economic thought have a role to play in influencing the
> direction of economic research and policy formation. Given the
> balkanisation of academic economic knowledge this function is unlikely to
> be performed from 'outside' departments.
Before responding specifically to your two statements here, let me say
that my response reflects my own interests and background, and I am not
implying that others need do the same. In fact, I think that many
historians of economics are also economists (I still want to distinguish
between them) and as economists would agree with you.
My response:
1. I was trained first as an historian, and only latterly as an economist.
A fair portion of my training in economics was in economic history and the
history of economics, and historiographic concerns dominated my training
in both of these fields (I also did a field in economic methodology, but I
received no training in econometrics). To date I am still far more
comfortable reading the literature of North-American intellectual history
than I am reading contemporary articles in economic theory. I read
regularly now in the history of biology, sociology, political science, and
philosophy, and also in science studies, cultural studies, and literary
theory to supplement my research in history of economics. I say this not
to suggest that everyone should be doing the same, but simply to point out
that in some cases, the barriers of language and training are between
historians of economics and economists, not between historians of
economics and historians. Do not assume that all historians of economics
were or are first and foremost economists.
2. Because many historians of economics were trained primarily as
economists, many of them do want to contribute to the direction of
economic research and policy formation. I have tried in my responses
simply to indicate that this is not a requirement of the historian of
economics per se.
Ross
Ross B. Emmett Editor, HES and CIRLA-L
Augustana University College
Camrose, Alberta CANADA T4V 2R3
voice: (403) 679-1517 fax: (403) 679-1129
e-mail: [log in to unmask] or [log in to unmask]
URL: http://www.augustana.ab.ca/~emmer
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