萨缪尔森的幽灵:辉格史观与经济理论的重新诠释

Samuelson's ghosts: Whig history and the reinterpretation of economic theory

Cambridge Journal of Economics · 2014
被引 23
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

回顾了萨缪尔森1987年提出的辉格史观纲领对经济学的影响,并在2007年金融危机后批评经济思想质量的背景下,重新评估这一纲领对当代经济思维与实践的作用。

Abstract

Over a quarter of a century has passed since the 1987 publication of Paul A. Samuelson’s historiographical manifesto ‘Out of the closet: A program for the Whig history of economic science’, summarising arguments that had developed during a 16-year debate provoked by his 1971Journal of Economic Literature article on the Marxian transformation problem. Samuelson’s intervention marked a defining turning point in the evolution of contemporary economic thought. In the wake of the economic turmoil that opened with the 2007 financial crash, 20 years after Samuelson’s manifesto, criticisms of the quality of economic thought have multiplied. This special issue of Cambridge Journal of Economics offers a timely re-appraisal of the impact of the Whig-historical programme on the economic thinking and practices that have become the target of today’s critics. The term ‘Whig history’ was originally coined by the English historian Herbert Butterfield (1981 [1931]) to refer to what Peter Boettke (2005) describe as ‘history as written by those perceived to have been the intellectual victors of key debates’. Butterfield’s largely successful purpose was to discredit and eliminate the practice, amongst historians, of presenting the past and its ideas as nothing more than an imperfect form of the present. Since then, awareness of the dangers of such reductionism and the necessity of what Bagchi (2014) calls a ‘contextual’ approach to social knowledge has spread through most of the social sciences.

萨缪尔森辉格史学经济思想史马克思主义转形问题