Microfoundations
Denis, A. (2013). Microfoundations. Paper presented at the Microfoundations, 02-07-2013 - 04-07-2013, University of Greenwich, UK.
Abstract
The paper argues that the microfoundations programme can be understood as an implementation of an underlying methodological principle, methodological individualism, and that it therefore shares a fundamental ambiguity with that principle, viz, whether the macro must be derived from and therefore reducible to, or rather consistent with micro-level behaviours. The pluralist conclusion of the paper is not that research guided by the principle of microfoundations is necessarily wrong, but that the exclusion of approaches not guided by that principle is indeed necessarily wrong. The argument is made via an examination of the advantages claimed for dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models, the relationship between parts and wholes in social science, and the concepts of reduction, substrate neutrality, the intentional stance, and hypostatisation.
Publication Type: | Conference or Workshop Item (Paper) |
---|---|
Subjects: | H Social Sciences > HB Economic Theory |
Departments: | School of Policy & Global Affairs > Economics |
Download (528kB) | Preview
Export
Downloads
Downloads per month over past year