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Economics 5343
Seminar on the History of Economic Thought
Steve Gardner
Fall 2007
Course Objectives
A student who successfully completes this course should:
- understand the historical continuities and interruptions in
the
subject matter and methods of economics that have been explored and
employed
since the days of Moses and Aristotle.
- understand the intellectual, cultural, and material forces
that
have shaped the historical development of economics
- be able to locate and interpret original classic texts
materials,
and appreciate the different methods of exposition that have been used
to
develop and transmit economic ideas.
- gain cultural literacy by understanding the contributions
of
the major schools of economic thought (Mercantilists, Physiocrats,
Classicals,
Marxists, Keynesians, Monetarists, etc.), and gain familiarity with
their
major contributors.
- apply theories and concepts from the course to practical
issues
in economic behavior and policy.
Required Texts
- Buchholz, Todd G. New Ideas from Dead Economists: An
Introduction
to Modern Economic Thought. Revised Edition, Plume, 1999.
- Keynes,
J.M., The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money
,
Prometheus Books, 1997 [originally published in 1935].
- Marshall,
Alfred. Principles of Economics. 8th Edition.
Prometheus
Books, 1997 [1st edition originally published in 1890; 8th edition in
1920].
- Mill, John
Stuart. Principles of Political Economy . 7th edition,
Books
II, III, IV and V and Chapters on Socialism. Oxford University Press,
1994
[1st edition originally published in 1848; 7th edition in 1871].
- Smith,
Adam. An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations
.
Two Volumes. Reprint of the Oxford University Press
edition
by Liberty Press, 1981 [originally published in 1776].
- Tucker, Robert C., editor. The Marx-Engels Reader.
2nd.
Edition. Norton, 1978 [selections originally published between 1843 and
1894].
Recommended on Reserve in Moody Library
- Abbott, Leonard Dalton, ed., Masterworks of Economics
, McGraw-Hill, 1973.
- Spiegel, Henry William. The Growth of Economic Thought
. Duke University Press, 1971.
- Sweezy, Paul. The Theory of Capitalist Development.
Oxford
University Press, 1942.
Related Web Sites
Grading
Semester grades will be based on your performance on
three
examinations and a term paper, each accounting for one-fourth of the
course
grade. Unless you are told otherwise, each test will include a
combination
of multiple choice and essay questions. Look
here
for guidelines on writing the term paper. See other important
information under Attendance, below.
Attendance
- In keeping with University regulations, students who miss
over
25% of class meetings (in this case, 8 or more sessions) will
automatically
fail the course. On the other hand, three points will be added to your
semester
average if you have perfect attendance; two points will be added if you
have
one absence; one point will be added if you have two absences (for
purposes
of earning this extra credit, there are no "excused absences"). If you
arrive
late for class, you will be recorded absent unless you have the roll
changed
after class. Please avoid late arrivals and early departures -- they
are
disruptive. Preparation and participation may also be taken into
account
when course grades are determined.
Tentative Course Schedule
(Please read the required assignments before each class)
Methodology and Philosophy of Science-August
23
- Lecture Notes
- William
Trochim,
"Positivism and Post-Positivism"
- William
Trochim,
"Deductive and Inductive Thinking"
- Roger
Jones,
"Philosophy of Science"
- Milton
Friedman, "The Methodology of Positive Economics," 1953
-
Ernest
Nagel, "Assumptions in Economic Theory, The American Economic Review,
Vol.
53, No. 2, May, 1963
-
Paul
Samuelson, "Discussion," The American Economic Review, Vol. 53, No. 2,
May,
1963, pp. 231-234.
-
Fritz
Machlup, "Professor Samuelson on Theory and Realism," The American
Economic
Review, Vol. 54, No. 5, Sep., 1964.
-
Paul
A. Samuelson, "Theory and Realism: A Reply," The American Economic
Review,
Vol. 54, No. 5, Sep., 1964.
- George Soros,
"The
Capitalist Threat," Atlantic Monthly, February 1997
- Recommended:
Ancient and Medieval-- August 28 and 30
Exodus 20:8-11, 22:12, and 23:10-11; Leviticus 25:1-55;
Numbers
27:1-11; Deuteronomy 15:1-15 and 23:19-20; II Kings 6:25 and 7:1;
Ecclesiastes
4:8 and 5:18; Matthew 6:28-34 and 25:14-30; Luke 6:34-35 and 10:38-41;
Acts
4:32-37; and II Thessalonians 3:7-12.
- Recommended:
- Spiegel, Chapters 1 and 2.
- Thomas
Aquinas,
Summa Theologica
- Aristotle,
Nichomachean
Ethics
- Aristotle,
Politics
--Book I, Chapters 4, 5, 9, and 10; Book II, Chapters 4 and 5; Book
VII,
Chapters 4 and 9.
Mercantilism--September 4 and 6
- Recommended:
- Spiegel, Chapter 5.
- Thomas
Mun, England's Treasure by Foreign Trade, 1664 (In Abbott,
Vol.
1, pp. 6-27).
-
David
Hume, Essays Moral, Political, and Literary, 1742 and 1752
-
Richard
Cantillon, An Essay on Commerce in General, 1755
Quesnay and the Physiocrats--September
11
and 13
- Recommended:
FIRST EXAMINATION--SEPTEMBER 20 (covering only the material above, but
taken after first Adam Smith day, below)
Adam Smith--September 18, 25, and 27
- Class Notes 9/18
- Class Notes 9/25
TERM PAPER PROSPECTUS DUE
- Class Notes 9/27
- Buchholz, pp. 10-16, 19-41.
- Smith (skip
the
editor's general introduction), pp. 10-36 (I.1.1
- I.3.8), pp. 44-53 (I.4.11 - I.5.15), pp. 65-89 (I.6.1
- I.8.24), pp. 105-106 (I.9.1-6),
pp. 113-115 (I.9.18-24),
pp. 152-153 (I.10.44-47),
pp. 160-162 (I.11.1-9),
pp. 337-342 (II.3.18-31).
- Recommended:
Thomas Malthus--October 2
Recommended:
David Ricardo--October 4, 9, and
11
- Recommended:
- Ricardo,
Principles of Political Economy and Taxation, 1817 (In Abbott,
Vol.
2, pp. 6-65)
- Barber,
Chapter 3.
- Thomas
Malthus, The Corn Laws, 1814
- Thomas
Malthus, Grounds for an Opinion on the Policy of Restricting the
Importation
of Foreign Corn, 1815
- Thomas
Malthus, The Nature of Rent, 1815
- Spiegel, Chapter 14.
John Stuart Mill--October 16, 18,
23
- Class Notes 10/16
- Class Notes 10/18
- Class Notes 10/23
- Buchholz, Chapter 5.
- Bentham,
Jeremy. Principles of Morals and Legislation, 1823
(Chapters 1 and 4).
- Mill ,
Book
II, Chapter 1 (pp. 5-24); Book IV, Chapters 6 and 7 (pp. 124-158); Book
V,
Chapters 1, 2, and 11 (pp. 159-189 and 324-367); and Chapters on
Socialism,
pp. 379-386, 413-423, and 431-436.
- Recommended:
SECOND EXAMINATION--October 25Karl Marx--October
30, November 1, and November 6
- Class Notes, 10/30 and 11/1
- Class Notes, 11/6
- Buchholz, Chapter 6.
- Tucker, pp. 203-217, 336-340, 355-358, 436-438,
485,
490-491, 522-524, 529-531, 538, 698-701, 716-717.
- Recommended:
Alfred Marshall and Marginalism--November
8, 13, and 15
- Class Notes 11/9 and 11/14
TERM PAPER DUE (14th)
- Class Notes 11/16
- Marshall
, Prefaces; Book I, Chapters 1 and 4; Book II, Chapter 3, §1; Book
III,
Chapters 3, 4, and 6; and Book V, Chapters 3, 5, 12, and 13.
- Buchholz, Chapter 7.
- Recommended:
John Maynard Keynes--November 20 and 27 (11/22 is
Thanksgiving Holiday)
- Buchholz, Chapter 9.
- Keynes
(full text), Selections, pp. v-viii, 3-22, 27-28, 165-172, 245-54, 372-84.
- Recommended:
Friedman and Monetarism-- November 29
- Friedman Notes
- Buchholz, Chapter 10.
-
Friedman,
Milton. "A Theoretical Framework for Monetary Analysis ," The
Journal
of Political Economy, Vol. 78, No. 2. (Mar. - Apr., 1970), pp.
193-238.
-
Friedman,
Milton. "Nobel Lecture: Inflation and Unemployment ," The
Journal of
Political Economy, Vol. 85, No. 3. (Jun., 1977), pp. 451-472.
THIRD EXAMINATION--DECEMBER 11, 2:00-5:00 PM
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