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Terence Hutchison's 1938 contribution to economic methodology

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dc.contributor.advisor Torr, Christopher en
dc.contributor.author Hart, John Slater, 1954- en
dc.date.accessioned 2009-08-25T10:45:54Z
dc.date.available 2009-08-25T10:45:54Z
dc.date.issued 2009-08-25T10:45:54Z
dc.date.submitted 2002-02-28 en
dc.identifier.citation Hart, John Slater, 1954- (2009) Terence Hutchison's 1938 contribution to economic methodology, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/693> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/693
dc.description.abstract Terence Hutchison's 1938 essay has been variously interpreted as introducing positivism, ultra-empiricism, and Popperian falsificationism into economics. Given Popper's well known anti-positivist stance, this state of affairs may seem puzzling. It might be presumed either that contradictions of some kind are involved in Hutchison's position, or that Popper's stance is not so far removed from logical positivism after all. In tins thesis the latter option is adopted and Popper and logical positivism is viewed as part of a wider 'logical reconstructionist' pre-Quinean philosophy of science. Yet this move may not, and should not, resolve all disquietude on the part of the reader. For, to the extent that Hutchison adopted those aspects of Popper which clashed with logical positivism, there is an inherent contradiction between the view that Hutchison introduced positivism and the view that he introduced Popper into economics. This provides us with the springboard we need for our thesis. For the contradiction is resolved once these views are recognised as turning Hutchison into a straw man. In the weak version of our thesis we argue that there has been an overemphasis on the positivist and Popperian elements in Hutchison's essay and a neglect of the extent to which it is concerned with economic methodology. In the strong version of our thesis we argue that Hutchison's essay is best viewed as a modern restatement of the inductivist-empirical-historical, as opposed to the deductivist-apriorist-fonnalist, approach in the long-standing methodenstreit in economics. In this restatement Hutchison draws on various elements of positivism and Popper to support a position that arises out of, and is specific to, the concerns of economic methodology, rather than to promote any particular philosophy of science in economics. Survey chapters on the philosophy of science with special emphasis on logical positivism, and on aspects of the history of economic methodology, enable us to evaluate the nature of Hutchison's essay and to substantiate our thesis. Thereafter we highlight the shortcomings of the traditional interpretations of Hutchison's essay pointing to how these have limited Hutchison's influence in economics. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (v, 289 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Terence Hutchison en
dc.subject Economic methodology
dc.subject Philosophy of science
dc.subject Empiricism
dc.subject Logical positivism
dc.subject Popper
dc.subject Inductivism
dc.subject Hypothetico-deductivism
dc.subject Methodenstreit
dc.subject Historical method
dc.subject Institutional approach
dc.subject.ddc 330.01
dc.subject.lcsh Hutchison, T. W. (Terence Wilmot)
dc.subject.lcsh Popper, Karl R. (Karl Raimund), 1902-1994
dc.subject.lcsh Economics -- Methodology
dc.subject.lcsh Economics -- Philosophy
dc.subject.lcsh Science -- Philosophy
dc.subject.lcsh Empiricism
dc.subject.lcsh Logical positivism
dc.title Terence Hutchison's 1938 contribution to economic methodology en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Economics en
dc.description.degree D. Litt. et Phil. (Economics) en


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