Hermes (Jan 2014)

Can Authority be Sustained while Balancing Accessibility and Formality?

  • Nigar Hashimzade,
  • Georgina A. Myles,
  • Gareth D. Myles

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7146/hjlcb.v27i52.25132
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 52

Abstract

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Economics has developed into a quantitative discipline that makes extensive use of mathematical and statistical concepts. When writing a dictionary for economics undergraduates it has to be recognised that many users will not have sufficient training in mathematics to benefi t from formal definitions of mathematical and statistical concepts. In fact, it is more than likely that the user will want the dictionary to provide an accessible version of a definition that avoids mathematical notation. Providing a verbal description of a mathematical concept has the risk that the outcome is both verbose (compared to a definition using appropriate mathematical symbols) and imprecise. For the author of a dictionary this raises the question of how to resolve this conflict between accessibility and formal correctness. We use a range of examples from the Oxford Dictionary of Economics to illustrate this conflict and to assess the extent to which a non-formal definition can be viewed as authoritative.