Just another niche in the wall? How specialization is changing the face of mainstream economics ; Multidisciplinarity, interdisciplinarity, transdisciplinarity, and the sciences ; Workshop on the economy as an evolving complex system: summary ; The methodology of scientific research programmes ; Becoming Applied: The Transformation of Economics after 1970 ; Economics: continuities, changes, challenges ; The organization of economics ; Of positivism and the history of economic thought ; Against the unification of the behavioral social sciences ; Macrodynamics of Economics: A Bibliometric History ; The death of neoclassical economics ; The wrong type of pluralism: toward a transdisciplinary social science ; The changing face of mainstream economics ; Reintegrating the Social Sciences: The Dahlem Group ; The (changing) knowledge production function: evidence for the MIT Department of Biology for 1970–2000 ; The turn in economics: neoclassical dominance to mainstream pluralism ; The turn in recent economics and return of orthodoxy ; Heterodox economics, the fragmentation of the mainstream, and embedded individual analysis ; Mäki on economics imperialism ; Economics imperialism under the impact of psychology: the case of behavioral development economics ; Economics imperialism versus multidisciplinarity ; Neoclassical, mainstream, orthodox, and heterodox economics ; Heterodox United vs. Mainstream City? Sketching a framework for interested pluralism in economics ; Methodological pluralism and pluralism of methods ; Structured pluralism ; Plurality in orthodox and heterodox economics ; A future for schools of thought and pluralism in heterodox economics ; A review of Kuhnian and Lakatosian ‘Explanations’ in economics ; Dimensions of pluralism in economics ; State and future of the ‘Citadel’ and of the heterodoxies in economics: challenges and dangers, convergences and cooperation ; Fairness and retaliation: the economics of reciprocity ; Can neoclassical economics handle complexity? The fallacy of the oil spot dynamic ; Empirical evidence of innovation in economic theory: scientific interaction and knowledge diffusion at the Santa Fe Institute ; The superiority of economists ; From imperialism to inspiration: a survey of economics and psychology ; Paradigms and pluralism in heterodox economics ; In evolutionary games, enlightened self-interests are still ultimately self-interests ; A framework for the unification of the behavioral sciences ; Homo Socialis: an analytical core for sociological theory ; Proliferation of academic journals: effects on research quantity and quality ; The next hundred years ; Why economists should pay heed to sociology ; The origin of predictable behavior ; ‘Economic man’ in cross-cultural perspective: behavioral experiments in 15 small-scale societies ; The expanding domain of economics ; Evolutionary and institutional economics as the new mainstream ; A Trojan horse for sociology? Preferences versus evolution and morality ; Plea for a pluralistic and rigorous economics ; Introduction to the special issue on the future of institutional and evolutionary economics ; Pluralism versus heterodoxy in economics and the social sciences ; The complexity era in economics ; The burden of knowledge and the ‘death of the Renaissance man’: is innovation getting harder ; Age and great invention ; Age and scientific genius ; The economic crisis is a crisis for economic theory ; On the structure of scientific revolutions in economics ; Revolution as evolution: the concept of evolution in Kuhn’s philosophy ; Informal collaboration ; Falsification and the methodology of scientific research programmes ; The rate of growth in scientific publication and the decline in coverage provided by the Science Citation Index ; Economic imperialism ; Life among the Econ ; Research in the history of economic thought as a vehicle for the defense and criticism of orthodox economics ; The one world and the many theories ; Economic imperialism: concept and constraints ; Scientific imperialism: difficulties in definition, identification, and assessment ; The economic history of the American Economic Review: a century’s explosion of economics research ; Is Kuhnean incommensurability a good basis for pluralism in economics? ; The determinants of co-authorship: an analysis of the economics literature ; Refusing the gift ; Three models of scientific development ; Gattopardo economics: the crisis and the mainstream response of change that keeps things the same ; Prospects for economics ; Journals, editors, referees, and authors: experiences at the Journal of Economic Literature ; Editor’s note ; A ranking of journals in economics and related fields ; Methodological pluralism ; Pluralisms in economics ; The irresistible charm of the microfoundations dogma or the overwhelming force of the discipline’s hard core ; Path dependence, competition and succession in the dynamics of scientific revolution ; Economics: the imperial science ; The journals of economics ; The future of evolutionary economics is in a vision from the past ; The perils of paradigm mentalities: revisiting Kuhn, Lakatos, and Popper ; The future of evolutionary economics: can we break out of the beachhead ; Sociology and the imperialism of economics ; The increasing dominance of teams in the production of knowledge
academicJournal
Zugriff:
There is considerable discussion on so-called ‘mainstream pluralism’, that is, on the co-presence of a variety of research programmes in today’s mainstream economics that: 1. significantly deviate from the neoclassical core; 2. are pursued by different, often separate communities of researchers; and 3. have their origins outside economics. The literature tends to regard mainstream pluralism as a transitory state towards a new, post-neoclassical, mainstream. This paper advances a new interpretation: it suggests that the changing and fragmented state of mainstream economics is likely to persist over time under the impact of specialization (as a self-reinforcing mechanism) and the creation of new specialties and approaches, also through collaboration with researchers from other disciplines. ; Mainstream pluralism, Mainstream economics, Specialization, Burden of knowledge, Economics in relation to other disciplines
Titel: |
Just another niche in the wall? How specialization is changing the face of mainstream economics ; Multidisciplinarity, interdisciplinarity, transdisciplinarity, and the sciences ; Workshop on the economy as an evolving complex system: summary ; The methodology of scientific research programmes ; Becoming Applied: The Transformation of Economics after 1970 ; Economics: continuities, changes, challenges ; The organization of economics ; Of positivism and the history of economic thought ; Against the unification of the behavioral social sciences ; Macrodynamics of Economics: A Bibliometric History ; The death of neoclassical economics ; The wrong type of pluralism: toward a transdisciplinary social science ; The changing face of mainstream economics ; Reintegrating the Social Sciences: The Dahlem Group ; The (changing) knowledge production function: evidence for the MIT Department of Biology for 1970–2000 ; The turn in economics: neoclassical dominance to mainstream pluralism ; The turn in recent economics and return of orthodoxy ; Heterodox economics, the fragmentation of the mainstream, and embedded individual analysis ; Mäki on economics imperialism ; Economics imperialism under the impact of psychology: the case of behavioral development economics ; Economics imperialism versus multidisciplinarity ; Neoclassical, mainstream, orthodox, and heterodox economics ; Heterodox United vs. Mainstream City? Sketching a framework for interested pluralism in economics ; Methodological pluralism and pluralism of methods ; Structured pluralism ; Plurality in orthodox and heterodox economics ; A future for schools of thought and pluralism in heterodox economics ; A review of Kuhnian and Lakatosian ‘Explanations’ in economics ; Dimensions of pluralism in economics ; State and future of the ‘Citadel’ and of the heterodoxies in economics: challenges and dangers, convergences and cooperation ; Fairness and retaliation: the economics of reciprocity ; Can neoclassical economics handle complexity? The fallacy of the oil spot dynamic ; Empirical evidence of innovation in economic theory: scientific interaction and knowledge diffusion at the Santa Fe Institute ; The superiority of economists ; From imperialism to inspiration: a survey of economics and psychology ; Paradigms and pluralism in heterodox economics ; In evolutionary games, enlightened self-interests are still ultimately self-interests ; A framework for the unification of the behavioral sciences ; Homo Socialis: an analytical core for sociological theory ; Proliferation of academic journals: effects on research quantity and quality ; The next hundred years ; Why economists should pay heed to sociology ; The origin of predictable behavior ; ‘Economic man’ in cross-cultural perspective: behavioral experiments in 15 small-scale societies ; The expanding domain of economics ; Evolutionary and institutional economics as the new mainstream ; A Trojan horse for sociology? Preferences versus evolution and morality ; Plea for a pluralistic and rigorous economics ; Introduction to the special issue on the future of institutional and evolutionary economics ; Pluralism versus heterodoxy in economics and the social sciences ; The complexity era in economics ; The burden of knowledge and the ‘death of the Renaissance man’: is innovation getting harder ; Age and great invention ; Age and scientific genius ; The economic crisis is a crisis for economic theory ; On the structure of scientific revolutions in economics ; Revolution as evolution: the concept of evolution in Kuhn’s philosophy ; Informal collaboration ; Falsification and the methodology of scientific research programmes ; The rate of growth in scientific publication and the decline in coverage provided by the Science Citation Index ; Economic imperialism ; Life among the Econ ; Research in the history of economic thought as a vehicle for the defense and criticism of orthodox economics ; The one world and the many theories ; Economic imperialism: concept and constraints ; Scientific imperialism: difficulties in definition, identification, and assessment ; The economic history of the American Economic Review: a century’s explosion of economics research ; Is Kuhnean incommensurability a good basis for pluralism in economics? ; The determinants of co-authorship: an analysis of the economics literature ; Refusing the gift ; Three models of scientific development ; Gattopardo economics: the crisis and the mainstream response of change that keeps things the same ; Prospects for economics ; Journals, editors, referees, and authors: experiences at the Journal of Economic Literature ; Editor’s note ; A ranking of journals in economics and related fields ; Methodological pluralism ; Pluralisms in economics ; The irresistible charm of the microfoundations dogma or the overwhelming force of the discipline’s hard core ; Path dependence, competition and succession in the dynamics of scientific revolution ; Economics: the imperial science ; The journals of economics ; The future of evolutionary economics is in a vision from the past ; The perils of paradigm mentalities: revisiting Kuhn, Lakatos, and Popper ; The future of evolutionary economics: can we break out of the beachhead ; Sociology and the imperialism of economics ; The increasing dominance of teams in the production of knowledge
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Autor/in / Beteiligte Person: | Cedrini, Mario ; Fontana, Magda |
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Medientyp: | academicJournal |
DOI: | 10.1093/cje/bex003 |
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