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The Journal of Philosophical Economics
2007 - 2025
Current editor(s): Valentin Cojanu From Bucharest Academy of Economic Studies, The Journal of Philosophical Economics Contact information at EDIRC. Bibliographic data for series maintained by Valentin Cojanu (). Access Statistics for this journal.
Is something missing from the series or not right? See the RePEc data check for the archive and series.
Volume 9, issue 2, 2016
- The case for increasing returns (2): the methods of planning horizons pp. 5-42

- Frederic B. Jennings
- Poor countries and development: a critique of Nicole Hassoun and a defense of the argument for good institutional quality pp. 43-70

- Ronald Olufemi Badru
- Rawls and Piketty: the philosophical aspects of economic inequality pp. 71-84

- Goran Sunajko
- Slow living and the green economy pp. 85-104

- Diana-Eugenia Ioncica and Eva-Cristina Petrescu
- Review of Potrosacka kultura i konzumerizam [Consumer Culture and Consumerism], edited by Snjezana Colic, Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar, Zagreb, 2013, pb, ISBN 978-953-7964-00-9, 206 pages pp. 105-108

- Ana Maskalan
- Review of Dani Rodrik, Economics Rules: Why Economics Works, When It Fails, and How to Tell the Difference, Oxford University Press, 2015, hb, ISBN 978-0-19-873689-9, xi+253 pages pp. 109-113

- Dorin Iulian Chiritoiu
- Review of J. E. King, Advanced Introduction to Post Keynesian Economics, Cheltenham (UK), Edward Elgar Publishing, 2015, pb, ISBN 978-1-78254-843-0,x + 139 pages pp. 114-118

- Valentin Cojanu
Volume 9, issue 1, 2015
- The case for increasing returns I: ‘The Hicksian Getaway’ and ‘The Hirshleifer Rescue’

- Frederic B. Jennings
- Economics in times of crisis. In search of a new paradigm in economic sciences

- Joanna Dzionek-Kozłowska
- The welfare costs of rent-seeking: a methodologically individualist and subjectivist revision

- Michael Makovi
- Economics of paternalism: the hidden costs of self-commanding strategies

- Christophe Salvat
- A criterion for realism, with an application to behavioral economic models

- Gustavo Marqués and Diego Weisman
- Review of The Anthropocene and the Global Environmental Crisis: Rethinking modernity in a new epoch, edited by Clive Hamilton, Christophe Bonneuil and François Gemenne, Routledge, London, 2015, pbk, ISBN 978-1-138-821124-8, pp. 187+xi

- Valentin Cojanu
Volume 8, issue 2, 2015
- Editorial

- Valentin Cojanu
- Collective beliefs and horizontal interactions between groups: the case of political parties

- Olivier Ouzilou
- Work, recognition and subjectivization: some remarks about the modernity of Kojève’s interpretation of Hegel

- Richard Sobel
- Expiration of private property rights: a note

- Walter E. Block
- ‘Ups’ and ‘downs’ in metaphor use: the case of increase / decrease metaphors in Spanish economic discourse

- Anca Pecican
- A review of the Granger-causality fallacy

- Mariusz Maziarz
- A brief history of international trade thought: From pre-doctrinal contributions to the 21st century heterodox international economics

- Carmen Elena Dorobat
- Review of Philip Mirowski, Never Let a Serious Crisis Go to Waste: How Neoliberalism Survived the Financial Meltdown, New York, Verso, 1st edition, 2013, ISBN: 978-1-781-68079-7, 384 pages

- Serban Brebenel
- Review of Abdul Azim Islahi, History of Islamic Economic Thought: Contributions of Muslim Scholars to Economic Thought and Analysis, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham (UK), hb, 2014, ISBN 9781784711375, viii+125 pages

- Valentin Cojanu
Volume 8, issue 1, 2014
- Social mechanisms and social causation

- Friedel Weinert
- Modeling exogenous moral norms

- Ross A. Tippit
- Shifting economics: fundamental questions and Amartya K. Sen’s pragmatic humanism

- Tara Natarajan
- A comment on scarcity

- M. Northrup Buechner
- Commentary on secrets of economics editors: an unintended ethnography of economics

- Utku Balaban
- Review of Jérôme Ballet, Damien Bazin, Jean-Luc Dubois, and François-Régis Mahieu, Freedom, Responsibility and Economics of the Person, London, Routledge, ebk, 2014, 174 pp., ISBN 978-0-203-79633-7

- Carmen Elena Dorobat
- Review of Joseph E. Stiglitz and Bruce C. Greenwald, Creating a Learning Society: A New Approach to Growth, Development and Social Progress, New York, Columbia University Press, 2014, hb, 34.95$, 680 pp., ISBN 978-0-231-15214-3

- Alina Toarna
Volume 7, issue 2, 2014
- Unusual Humean issues in materialistic political economy

- Andrea Micocci
- Growth theory after Keynes, part II: 75 years of obstruction by the mainstream economics culture

- Hendrik Van den Berg
- Behavioural controversy concerning homo economicus: a Humean perspective

- Khandakar Elahi
- Dividing a cake (or) Distributional values in the measurement of economic inequality: an expository note

- Subbu Subramanian
- Review of Cheryle Desha and Karlso ‘Charlie’ Hargroves, Higher Education and Sustainable Development: A model for curriculum renewal, London: Routledge, 2014, 268 pp., hb, $180.00, 9781844078592, pb, $49.95, ISBN 9781844078608

- R. Edward di Collalto
- Review of Ole Bjerg, Making Money: The Philosophy of Crisis Capitalism, London: Verso, 2014, 256 pp., pb, £19.99, ISBN 9781781682654

- Georgios Papadopoulos
- RReview of David Stuckler and Sanjay Basu, The Body Economic: Why Austerity Kills, New York, Basic Books, 2013, hb, 240 pp., $26.99, ISBN 9780465063987

- Jorge Tamames
Volume 7, issue 1, 2013
- Growth theory after Keynes, part I: the unfortunate suppression of the Harrod-Domar model

- Hendrik Van den Berg
- Fairness through regulation? Reflections on a cosmopolitan approach to global finance

- Marta Božina Beroš and Marin Beroš
- On the problem of scale: Spinozistic sovereignty as the logical foundation of constitutional economics

- Benjamen F. Gussen
- The ethics of New Development Economics: is the Experimental Approach to Development Economics morally wrong?

- Stéphane J. Baele
- Research note on an experimental approach to the intrinsic motivations of corruption

- Valeria Burdea
- Review of Resilient Liberalism in Europe’s Political Economy, edited by Vivien A. Schmidt and Mark Thatcher, New York, Cambridge University Press, 2013, 469 pp., $32.99, ISBN 9781107613973

- Chantel F. Pheiffer
- Review of The Elgar Companion to Recent Economic Methodology, edited by John B. Davis and D. Wade Hands, Cheltenham, UK; Northampton, MA, USA, Edward Elgar, 2011, hb, 542 pp., ISBN 9781848447547

- Lucia Ovidia Vreja
- Review of Mark Blyth, Austerity. The History of a Dangerous Idea, New York: Oxford University Press, 2013, 304 pp., hb, $16.95, ISBN 9780199828302

- Juan Camilo Blanco
Volume 6, issue 2, 2013
- The ‘desire for money:’ Aristotelian blind spot in the field of economics? A French heterodox point of view

- Richard Sobel
- Subjective preferences and alternative costs

- William Barnett and Walter E. Block
- Money and value: a synthesis of the state theory of money and original institutional economics

- Georgios Papadopoulos
- The missing link: From Kautilya’s The Arthashastra to modern economics

- Marinko Skare
- The economic consequences of homo economicus: neoclassical economic theory and the fallacy of market optimality

- David Calnitsky and Asher Dupuy-Spencer
- Review of The Social Sciences and Democracy, edited by Jeroen Van Bouwel, London, Palgrave Macmillan, 2009, 268 pp., £58 hb, ISBN 9780230224391

- Ioana Negru
- Review of James E. Alvey, A Short History of Ethics and Economics: The Greeks, Cheltenham (UK), Edward Elgar Publishing, 2011, x+184 pp, hb, ISBN 9781847202017

- Dragos Bîgu
- Review of Pranab Bardhan, Awakening Giants, Feet of Clay: Assessing the Economic Rise of China and India, Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press, 2010, 172pp, hb, ISBN 9780691129945

- Géraud Bablon
Volume 6, issue 1, 2012
- A theory of planning horizons (2): the foundation for an ethical economics

- Frederic B. Jennings
- The Hegelian dialectics of global imbalances

- Célestin Monga
- Competitive markets, collective action, and the Big Box Retailer problem

- Brent D. Beal
- Observing productivity: what it might mean to be productive when viewed through the lens of Complexity Theory

- Manfred Füllsack
- Deep History: a rejoinder

- David Laibman
- Between a rock and a hard place: second thoughts on Laibman’s Deep History and the theory of punctuated equilibrium with regard to intellectual evolution

- Altuğ Yalçıntaş
- Review of Vito Tanzi, Government versus Markets – The Changing Economic Role of the State, New York, Cambridge University Press, 2011, 376pp, Hardback, ISBN 978-1-107-09653-0

- Xavier Landes
- Review of Paul Turpin, The Moral Rhetoric of Political Economy: Justice and Modern Economic Thought, Routledge, London & New York, 2011, pp. 163

- Sergiu Bãlan
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