Finance and Society (Jan 2015)

The economic imagination

  • Mike Hill,
  • Warren Montag

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2218/finsoc.v1i2.1385
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1
pp. 34 – 37

Abstract

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To apply the term ‘magical’ to modern economic thought is to suggest that there remains within it an unassimilated and unexamined residue of irrational thought. Further, it is to hold that this remnant persists despite the discipline's century long attempt to create a ‘pure’ form of economic science. The specific instance of irrationality to which we refer is perfectly visible but systematically overlooked because it exists in economics' most basic assumptions: not only the assumptions about the causal mechanisms that determine human action, but even more in what is increasingly acknowledged to be the theoretical Achilles heel of economics, the concept of the market itself.