Experts and Epistemic Monopolies

Voorkant
Roger Koppl, Steven Horwitz, Laurent Dobuzinskis
Emerald Group Publishing, 15 okt 2012 - 280 pagina's
In almost every corner of our private and public lives we rely on experts to advise us. This important species of labor is getting increasing attention from economists, who are beginning to learn how to apply their tools and assumptions to the problem of expertise. Under what conditions of supply and demand are experts likely to give us good advice? When is expert failure more likely? Do entrepreneurs challenge existing expertise? Are they experts themselves? And if economists are themselves experts, what happens when we turn the skeptical gaze of economic theory on the economist themselves? This volume publishes papers given at the third biennial Wirth Institute Conference on Austrian Economics. It brings together a heterogeneous collection of thinkers, some "Austrian" and others not, to critically engage the problem of experts. While mostly agreeing that there is a problem of experts, the papers collected here approach the issue from a variety of often-complementary perspectives.
 

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CHAPTER 2 OPENING REMARKS
17
REFLECTIONS ON SYMPATHETIC CONNECTIONS AMONG SUBJECTS AND RESEARCHERS
19
WHEN THE MARKET AND SCIENCE COLLIDE
37
CHAPTER 5 EXPERTISE AND THE CONDUCT OF MONETARY POLICY
61
EXPERTS IN P T BAUERS WORK
81
CHAPTER 7 EXPERTS AND ENTREPRENEURS
99
CHAPTER 8 THE EPISTEMOLOGY OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP
111
ENABLING JURIES TO MAKE INFORMED DECISIONS WHEN CONFRONTED WITH FORENSIC EVIDENCE
143
CHAPTER 10 EXPERTS AND INFORMATION CHOICE
171
A SELECTIVE REVIEW
203
CHAPTER 12 SCHOOLS OF THOUGHT IN THE REPUBLIC OF SOCIAL SCIENCE
227
CHAPTER 13 NOTHING NEW UNDER THE SUN? THE DIALECTIC OF PRUDENCE AND JUSTICE IN THE MODERN ERA
245
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