Want a Shipping Estimate? Add an Indian Pin Code, Click Here
This Product
Ships in 3-4 Weeks
Recommend
1
Share
4
Share
2
Share
5
Share
1
Send By e-mail
Verify Phone Number
Please enter the One Time Password (OTP) to verify phone number.
Write your own review
In just a few steps below you can become an online reviewer.
Please click on Continue to submit your review.
Title: Historical Perspectives on Modern Economics: Origins of Law and Economics: The Economists' New Science of Law, 1830-1930
Reviewed By:
Write your review here:
NOTE:HTML is not translated!
Rating:
Share this product on email
Historical Perspectives on Modern Economics: Origins of Law and Economics: The Economists' New Science of Law, 1830-1930
Product Details:
Format: Paperback / softback
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Language: English
Dimensions: 23.00 X 2.00 X 15.00
Publisher Code: 9780521023863
Date Added: 2018-08-08
Search Category: International
Jurisdiction: International
Overview:
This work analyzes the centrality of law in nineteenth-century historical and institutional economics and is a prehistory to the new institutional economics of the late twentieth century. In the 1830s the 'new science of law' aimed to explain the working rules of human society by using the methodologically individualist terms of economic discourse, stressing determinism and evolutionism. Practitioners stood readier than contemporary institutionalists to admit the possibilities of altruistic values, bounded rationality, and institutional inertia into their research program. Professor Pearson shows that the positive analysis of law tended to push normative discussions up from the level of specific laws to that of society's political organization. The analysis suggests that the professionalization of the social sciences - and the new science's own imprecision - condemned the program to oblivion around 1930. Nonetheless, institutional economics is currently developing greater resemblances to the now-forgotten new science.
+ View More
Table Of Contents:
Introduction; 1. A new science; 2. Towards a normal science; 3. Ghosts in the machine; 4. The normative dimension: institutional success and failure; 5. The way to oblivion; 6. The 'new' new science; Epilogue: the 'new' science; Endnotes; Biographical notes; References.