Intersubjectivity in Economics: Agents and Structures

Portada
Edward Fullbrook
Psychology Press, 2002 - 306 páginas

Traditional economics treats the defining subjective properties of economic agents (tastes, preferences, demands, goals and perceptions) as if they are determined independently of individual and collective relations with other agents. This collection of essays reflects the increasingly common view that economics cannot continue to disregard all economic phenomena inconsistent with this conception.
The volume is especially concerned with the idea of intersubjective influences on market outcomes. A team of expert international contributors have been brought together to address the question of intersubjectivity from a variety of perspectives. Using methods of description and analysis they explore the structures and effects of concrete interdependencies between individual subjectivities engaged in economic activity, and develop conceptual and analytical tools for this task. Many of the essays are interdisciplinary in scope and in addition to economics the book should provide valuable lessons in psychology, sociology, social theory, philosophy, political science and history.

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Contenido

Why intersubjectivity?
1
Collective intentionality and individual behavior
11
Reciprocal fairness cooperation and limits to competition 28
28
All consumption is conspicuous 43 5
43
Consumer behavior
56
On the need for a more complete ontology of the consumer 71
71
Conspicuous consumption in economic theory and thought 85 55
85
Radical
105
Hayek vs Keynes
139
Social structure
159
Conventions of coordination and the framing
181
Social networks and information
216
Towards a normative economics
241
The theory of conventions and a new theory of the firm
254
An intersubjective theory of value
273
Name Index
300

Intersubjectivity
123

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