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The Economic World View
Studies in the Ontology of Economics

The beliefs of economists are not solely determined by empirical


evidence in direct relation to the theories and models they hold.
Economists hold `ontological presuppositions', fundamental ideas
about the nature of being which direct their thinking about economic
behaviour. In this volume, leading philosophers and economists
examine these hidden presuppositions, searching for a `world view' of
economics. What properties are attributed to human individuals in
economic theories, and which are excluded? Does economic man exist?
Do markets have an essence? Do macroeconomic aggregates exist? Is
the economy a mechanism, the functioning of which is governed by a
limited set of distinct causes? What are the methodological implications
of different ontological starting points? This collection, which estab-
lishes economic ontology as a coordinated ®eld of study, will be of great
value to economists and philosophers of social sciences.

Uskali Mäki is Professor of Philosophy at the Erasmus University of


Rotterdam. He is an editor of the Journal of Economic Methodology and
member of the Executive Board of the International Network for
Economic Method. His recent publications include being an editor of
and contributor to The Handbook of Economic Methodology (1998),
Economics and Methodology: Crossing Boundaries (1998), and Fact and
Fiction in Economics (forthcoming).
The Economic World View
Studies in the Ontology of Economics

Edited by
È KI
USKALI MA
published by the press syndicate of the university of cambridge
The Pitt Building, Trumpington Street, Cambridge, United Kingdom

cambridge university press


The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 2RU, UK
40 West 20th Street, New York, NY 10011±4211, USA
10 Stamford Road, Oakleigh, Melbourne 3166, Australia
Ruiz de AlarcoÂn 13, 28014 Madrid, Spain
Dock House, The Waterfront, Cape Town 8001, South Africa
http://www.cambridge.org

# This collection Cambridge University Press 2001

The book is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant
collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the
written permission of Cambridge University Press.

First published 2001

Printed in the United Kingdom at the University Press, Cambridge

Typeset in 10/12pt Times System 3b2 [c e ]

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication data


The economic world view: studies in the ontology of economics / edited by Uskali MaÈki.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0 521 801761 ± ISBN 0 521 00020 3 (pb)
1. Economics ± Philosophy. 2. Economics ± Methodology. 3. Economic man. 4. Macro-
economics. 5. Microeconomics. I. MaÈki, Uskali.

HB72.E2664 2001
330.1 ± dc21 00±045499

isbn 0 521 80176 1 hardback


isbn 0 521 00020 3 paperback
For KEKLU
Contents

Notes on the contributors page ix


Preface xv

I The what, why, and how of economic ontology


1 Economic ontology: what? why? how? 3
uskali mäki
2 The empirical presuppositions of metaphysical explanations
in economics 15
harold kincaid
3 Quality and quantity in economics: the metaphysical
construction of the economic realm 32
scott meikle

II Rationality and homo economicus


4 The normative core of rational choice theory 57
russell hardin
5 The virtual reality of homo economicus 75
philip pettit
6 Expressive rationality: is self-worth just another kind of
preference? 98
shaun hargraves heap
7 Agent identity in economics 114
john b. davis
8 Chances and choices: notes on probability and
belief in economic theory 132
jochen runde

vii
viii Contents

III Micro, macro, and markets


9 Essences and markets 157
john o'neill
10 The metaphysics of microeconomics 174
alex rosenberg
11 Ontological commitments of evolutionary economics 189
jack vromen
12 Is macroeconomics for real? 225
kevin d. hoover
13 The possibility of economic objectivity 246
don ross and fred bennett

IV The world of economic causes


14 Ceteris paribus laws and socio-economic machines 275
nancy cartwright
15 Tendencies, laws, and the composition of economic causes 293
daniel m. hausman
16 Economics without mechanism 308
john duprEÂ

V Methodological implications of economic ontology


17 Sargent's symmetry saga: ontological versus technical
constraints 335
esther-mirjam sent
18 Two models of idealization in economics 359
alan nelson
19 The way the world works (www): towards an ontology of
theory choice 369
uskali mäki

Name index 390


Subject index 395
Contributors

Fred Bennett was, until his recent retirement, Director of Financial


Analysis for Industry Canada. He is now completing a doctorate in
philosophy at the University of Ottawa, and has published articles in
the area of political philosophy.
Nancy Cartwright is Professor in the History and Philosophy of Science
at the London School of Economics (since 1991), as well as Professor
of Philosophy at the University of California at San Diego (since
1998). She is the director of the Centre for the Philosophy of the
Natural and Social Sciences at the LSE and Fellow of the British
Academy. Her research interests include history and philosophy of
physics and economics, causal inference, and objectivity in science.
Cartwright's publications include Nature's Capacities and Their
Measurement (1989), How the Laws of Physics Lie (1983), and The
Dappled World: A Study of the Boundaries of Science (Cambridge
University Press, 1999). She co-authored the book Otto Neurath:
Philosophy between Science and Politics together with J. Cat, L. Fleck,
and T. Uebel (Cambridge University Press, 1995). Research projects in
which she is currently involved include `Measurement in Physics and
Economics'.
John B. Davis, Professor of Economics and International Business,
teaches International Trade and International Economics at Mar-
quette University. He is the author of Keynes's Philosophical Develop-
ment (Cambridge University Press, 1994), editor of New Economics
and Its History (1998), and co-editor of The Handbook of Economic
Methodology (1998). Among the journals he has published in are
Cambridge Journal of Economics, Economic Journal, Review of Poli-
tical Economy, History of Political Economy, Economics and Philos-
ophy, The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, and
Journal of Economic Methodology. He has been a visiting scholar at
Cambridge University and Duke University. He is President-Elect of

ix
x Notes on the contributors

the History of Economics Society, and has been the editor of the
Review of Social Economy since 1987. Currently he is working on a
book to be published by Routledge on theories of the individual in
economics.
John DupreÂ, formerly Professor of Philosophy at Stanford University, is
currently Professor of Philosophy at Birkbeck College, University of
London, and Senior Research Fellow at the University of Exeter. He
works on the philosophy of science, with special interests in the
philosophy of biology and of economics. He is the author of The
Disorder of Things: Metaphysical Foundations of the Disunity of
Science (1993) and the editor of The Latest on the Best: Essays on
Evolution and Optimality (1987).
Russell Hardin, professor and former chair of politics at New York
University, is the author of Liberalism, Constitutionalism, and Democ-
racy (1999), One for All (1995), Morality within the Limits of Reason
(1988), and Collective Action (1982). He was for many years the editor
of Ethics. He is currently at work on a book on problems of the
rationality and epistemology of ordinary mortals.
Shaun P. Hargreaves Heap teaches at the University of East Anglia. He
has also taught at Concordia University in Montreal and the Sydney
University. His research is in macroeconomics and in philosophy and
economics. His publications include Rationality in Economics (1989),
The New Keynesian Macroeconomics (1992) and Game Theory: A
Critical Introduction (with Y. Varoufakis, 1995) and articles in the
Economic Journal, the Journal of Post-Keynesian Economics and
Kyklos. His current research is on the economics of the media.
Daniel M. Hausman is Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Wisconsin, Madison. His work has focused on the philosophy of
economics and the problem of causation. In addition to numerous
journal articles he has published Capital, Pro®ts and Prices: An Essay
in the Philosophy of Economics (1981), The Inexact and Separate
Science of Economics (Cambridge University Press, 1992), Essays on
Philosophy and Economic Methodology (Cambridge University Press,
1992), Economic Analysis and Moral Philosophy (Cambridge Univer-
sity Press 1996; with Michael S. McPherson), Causal Asymmetries
(Cambridge University Press, 1998), The Philosophy of Economics: An
Anthology (editor) (Cambridge University Press, 1984; 2nd ed. 1994)
and Economic Methodology: Crossing Disciplinary Boundaries (edited
with R. Backhouse, U. MaÈki, and A. Salanti) (1998). He is the former
co-editor of the journal Economics and Philosophy.
Kevin Hoover is Professor of Economics at the University of California,
Davis. He is Chairman of the International Network for Economic
Notes on the contributors xi

Method and an editor of the Journal of Economic Methodology. He is


the author of numerous articles on topics in monetary economics,
macroeconomics, and economic methodology in journals such as
American Economic Review and the Journal of Economic Literature. He
is the author of The New Macroeconomics (Blackwell), and Causality
in Macroeconomics (Cambridge University Press).
Harold Kincaid is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Alabama
at Birmingham. He received his Ph.D in 1983 from Indiana University.
He is the author of Philosophical Foundations of the Social Sciences
(Cambridge University Press, 1996), Individualism and the Unity of
Science (1997), and numerous articles on topics in the philosophy of
the social sciences.
Uskali MaÈki is Professor of the philosophy of science and of economics
in particular at Erasmus University, Rotterdam. His research interests
cover topics in the philosophy of economics, such as realism, idealiza-
tion, explanation, rhetoric, the sociology and economics of eco-
nomics, and foundations of New Institutional and Austrian
economics. He has published in journals such as the Journal of
Economic Literature, Philosophy of the Social Sciences, Studies in the
History and Philosophy of Science, Economics and Philosophy, Cam-
bridge Journal of Economics, Perspectives on Science. He is a co-editor
of the Journal of Economic Methodology and of The Handbook of
Economic Methodology (1998), Economics and Methodology: Crossing
Boundaries (1998), and Rationality, Institutions and Economic Method-
ology (1993).
Scott Meikle is Reader in Philosophy at the University of Glasgow. He is
the author of Aristotle's Economic Thought (1995) and Essentialism in
the Thought of Karl Marx (1985), and is currently preparing a book on
Marx's relationship to the Anglo-Scottish Enlightenment and the
Aristotelian tradition in European philosophy.
Alan Nelson is Professor and Chair of the Department of Philosophy at
the University of California, Irvine. He has also taught at UCLA,
Pittsburgh, and Stanford, and has been a Fellow of the Zentrum fuÈr
InterdisziplinaÈre Forschung in Bielefeld. He has published widely in
the philosophy of science with special attention to the philosophy of
economics and to seventeenth-century science.
John O'Neill is currently Professor of Philosophy at Lancaster Univer-
sity. He has written widely on the philosophy of economics, ethics,
political philosophy and the philosophy of science. His publications
include The Market: Ethics, Information and Politics (1998) and
Ecology, Policy and Politics: Human Well-Being and the Natural World
(1993).
xii Notes on the contributors

Philip Pettit is Professor of Social and Political Theory at the Research


School of Social Sciences, ANU and also holds a regular Visiting
Professorship in Philosophy, Columbia University, New York. He is
the author of several books including, most recently, The Common
Mind: Essays in Psychology, Society and Politics (1993, 1996) and
Republicanism: A Theory of Freedom and Government (1997, 1999). He
is also the author of a large number of articles, including pieces in
Mind, Philosophical Review, Journal of Philosophy, Ethics, Philosophy
and Public Affairs, Economics and Philosophy and other major jour-
nals. Born in Ireland, he taught at universities there and in Britain
before moving to Australia in 1983.
Alexander Rosenberg is Professor of Philosophy and Director of the
Honors Program at the University of Georgia, Athens. His academic
speciality is the philosophy of science, especially the philosophy of
biology and of social and behavioural sciences. In addition to
numerous journal articles, he has published several books, including
Instrumental Biology or the Disunity of Science (1994), Economics:
Mathematical Politics or Science of Diminishing Returns? (1992),
Philosophy of Social Science (1988, 1995 enlarged edition), The
Structure of Biological Science (Cambridge University Press, 1985),
Hume and the Problem of Causation (1981), and Microeconomic Laws
(1976). He has taught at Syracuse University, the University of
California, Riverside, and has been a visiting professor at the
University of Minnesota and the University of California, Santa
Cruz. In 1994±5, he was a visiting lecturer in philosophy at Oxford
University.
Don Ross is Professor of Economics at the University of Cape Town, and
Convenor of UCT's Programme in Philosophy, Politics and Eco-
nomics. He is the author of over twenty articles, mainly on the
philosophical foundations of economics, of game theory and of
cognitive science, and has published three books. The most recent of
these is What People Want: The Concept of Utility from Bentham to
Game Theory. He is currently writing a book on equilibrium explana-
tion in history.
Jochen Runde is Lecturer in Economics at the Judge Institute of Manage-
ment Studies and Fellow of Girton College, Cambridge. Most of his
previous research has been in the methodology of economics, focusing
particularly on probability, uncertainty and decision theory, causality
and causal explanation, idealization and abstraction, and rational
choice theory. He is currently working on aspects of Austrian
Economics and the Information Theoretic Approach to Economics,
competing conceptions of social structure, tacit knowledge, credit-risk
Notes on the contributors xiii

assessment in the UK banking industry, and case studies of the


development of large multinational corporations.
Esther-Mirjam Sent is Assistant Professor in the Department of Eco-
nomics and Faculty Fellow in the Reilly Center for Science, Tech-
nology, and Values at the University of Notre Dame. She has
published articles in the Cambridge Journal of Economics, Journal of
Economic Methodology, History of Political Economy, Journal of
Economic Behavior and Organization, and Philosophy of Science,
among other journals. Her book The Evolving Rationality of Rational
Expectations: An Assessment of Thomas Sargent's Achievements (Cam-
bridge University Press, 1998) was awarded the 1999 Gunnar Myrdal
Prize of the European Association for Evolutionary Political
Economy. She has recently started a research project on Herbert
Simon.
Jack J. Vromen is currently Assistant Professor of Philosophy of
Economics and member of EIPE (Erasmus Institute for Philosophy
and Economics) at Erasmus University, Rotterdam. His main research
interests are related to evolutionary and institutional economics. In
addition to articles on these topics, he has published a book Economic
Evolution: An Enquiry into the Foundations of New Institutional Eco-
nomics (1995) which was awarded the 1995 Gunnar Myrdal Prize of
the European Association for Evolutionary Political Economy.
Preface

What is the world made of ? How does the world work? Is it governed by
causes? What is the nature of causality? Are some states of the world
necessary and some others impossible? Do universals exist? Do minds
exist? Do human beings have a free will? Are there social wholes
irreducible to their parts? These are examples of questions that philoso-
phers and scientists keep asking and answering, and have kept asking
and answering for centuries. They are concerned with the most funda-
mental components in our general world views. Some of the time, these
questions and answers have been explicit, while much of the time they are
implicit. Such questions and answers, at various levels of speci®city, are
ever-present also in economics: they are presupposed and they are
implied in the acts of economic reasoning, both theoretical and empirical.
The purpose of this book is to help start making them explicit. To make
such elements of economic reasoning explicit is to examine the ontology
of economics. It is to study the basic world views of economics.
The economic world view suggests an intellectual challenge from two
perspectives. It tends to be part of our everyday experience that economic
considerations (those related to money and the market, cost and bene®t
calculations, etc.) have been growing in importance in our social lives.
The academic world has also been witnessing, not only the growing
importance of economic constraints on academic life, but also the
growing importance of economics as a discipline, both as a resource for
studying social phenomena and as a target of study itself. In both cases,
questions arise as to what exactly it is that is growing in importance.
What exactly is the economic realm made of ?
I believe the study of economic ontology is a prerequisite for under-
standing economics as a scienti®c discipline. It is thus intended and
hoped that this volume will help de®ne a ®eld of study ± the ontology of
economics, or economic ontology ± so as to give it a relatively distinct
identity with a set of paradigmatic issues and ways of pursuing insights

xv
xvi Preface

into them; to help turn it into a collectively coordinated and cumulative


endeavour. Economic ontology is a ®eld to which both economists and
philosophers of economics and other social sciences can and should
contribute. The parallel recent development in general social theory
proceeds under the heading of `social ontology'; it is a project in which
social scientists and philosophers of society participate. It is hoped that,
in the context of economics and its philosophy, The Economic World
View will inspire more systematic efforts of the same sort in the future.
When Barry Smith, editor of the prestigious philosophy journal The
Monist, a few years ago asked me to guest edit a special issue and to
propose a topic, I did not hesitate long: it had to be on the ontological
foundations of economics. It seemed to me that there was a gap in the
otherwise rapidly growing literature on economic methodology and the
philosophy of economics: a systematic and collectively coordinated
project on economic ontology was missing. Scattered remarks and
contributions had been appearing here and there, but no self-consciously
collective and coordinated effort existed. I suggested the title, `The
Metaphysics of Economics' and started working. I worked quite hard,
and the harvest was good. Eight ®rst-rate papers were published. Those
eight papers, four of them rewritten, are included in the present volume.
It was clear that The Monist project had to be followed up. Editing a
larger volume of contributions was an obvious idea. I spread the
message, and once again the harvest was good. Several people proposed
contributions and started writing. I gave comments on the drafts that
were submitted, and many of the contributors generously served as
anonymous referees on other contributors' papers. In such respects it
was a genuinely collective endeavour. Under the pressure of the pro-
cedure, another ten papers survived, several of them having gone
through many rounds of revision.
There are several people whose help and support I want to acknowl-
edge. Barry Smith's invitation played a crucial role. Patrick McCartan at
Cambridge University Press was very encouraging from the beginning,
while Chris Harrison's role was invaluable at the end. Many of the
contributors have been extremely helpful in reviewing each other's
papers; also, several others acted as referees, assessing the submissions to
The Monist. At the ®nal stages of the project, the assistance of Frank
Hindriks and Judith de Putter has been indispensable. Many thanks to
them all. This project has been supported by the Foundation `Vereniging
Trustfonds Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam' in the Netherlands and the
Academy of Finland research project `Economics as a Target and Tool
of Science Studies'.
Uskali MaÈki, Rotterdam, May 2000
Part I
The what, why, and how of ecomonic
ontology
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