----------------- HES POSTING ----------------- Chas: The demand for courses in mainstream economics so-called may be increasing. But is this not a derived demand resulting from the overall dominance that neoclassical economics managed to achieve within the discipline? The intrinsic value of thought is not necessarily demand related. I dont know what demand there was for the works of Aristotle in his own time. One problem is that there are inherently powerful tendencies which run against the critiquing of prevailing institutions. There is a sort of "incumbency factor" which operates in favour of neoclassical or mainstream economics. To subject prevailing institutions to scrutiny, one has to survive against the grain. I'm not referring merely to such strains as Marxist economics. Because such economics has managed to obtain some organised support. It is the "freethinker" kind of critiques which lack organisational support. Anil Nauriya ------------ FOOTER TO HES POSTING ------------ For information, send the message "info HES" to [log in to unmask]