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Two Minds : Intuition and Analysis in the History of Economic Thought / by Roger Frantz.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: Boston, MA : Springer US, 2005Descripción: X, 178 páginas, recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9780387239347
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • HB71-74
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Part I: Intuition and the Brain -- Intuition’s Role in Scientific Discovery -- Intuition vs. Intuitionism -- Intuition and Errors in Judgment. Part II: Introduction -- Adam Smith -- John Stuart Mill -- Dugald Stewart, Thomas Malthus, and Henry Sedgwick -- John Meynard Keynes -- Joseph Shumpeter, Frank Knight, and Harvey Leibenstein -- Herbert Simon –"It’s Intuitively Obvious to the Casual Observer".
Resumen: The "Two Minds" noted economist Roger Frantz explores in this landmark book are, first, the analytical mind and, second, the intuitive mind. In part one he presents the leading theories on intuition, discusses recent developments in cognitive science, and borrows from such non-economist intuitors as Albert Einstein, Jonas Salk, Henri Poincare, Ludwig von Beethoven, and Robert Louis Stevenson to explore the role of intuition in science and creativity. In part two, Frantz considers the presumably analytic and logical nature of economics and then demonstrates the many ways in which economists from Adam Smith to Herbert Simon have relied on intuition as a fruitful mental activity. This book provides a rich complement and alternative perspective to some of the theoretical and mathematical models that have dominated the dismal science since the late 1940s.
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Springer eBooks

Part I: Intuition and the Brain -- Intuition’s Role in Scientific Discovery -- Intuition vs. Intuitionism -- Intuition and Errors in Judgment. Part II: Introduction -- Adam Smith -- John Stuart Mill -- Dugald Stewart, Thomas Malthus, and Henry Sedgwick -- John Meynard Keynes -- Joseph Shumpeter, Frank Knight, and Harvey Leibenstein -- Herbert Simon –"It’s Intuitively Obvious to the Casual Observer".

The "Two Minds" noted economist Roger Frantz explores in this landmark book are, first, the analytical mind and, second, the intuitive mind. In part one he presents the leading theories on intuition, discusses recent developments in cognitive science, and borrows from such non-economist intuitors as Albert Einstein, Jonas Salk, Henri Poincare, Ludwig von Beethoven, and Robert Louis Stevenson to explore the role of intuition in science and creativity. In part two, Frantz considers the presumably analytic and logical nature of economics and then demonstrates the many ways in which economists from Adam Smith to Herbert Simon have relied on intuition as a fruitful mental activity. This book provides a rich complement and alternative perspective to some of the theoretical and mathematical models that have dominated the dismal science since the late 1940s.

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