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.
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Volume 2, issue 2, 2009
- Economics and religion – a personalist perspective pp. 5-33

- Petre Comsa and Costea Munteanu
- Six choice metaphors and their social implications pp. 34-77

- Frederic B. Jennings
- The inheritance of heterodox economic thought: an examination of history of economic thought textbooks pp. 78-98

- Mary Wrenn
- The epistemology of modern finance pp. 99-120

- Xavier De Scheemaekere
- A review of Stephen T. Ziliak and Deirdre N. McCloskey, The Cult of Statistical Significance. How the Standard Error Costs Us Jobs, Justice, and Lives, The University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, 2008, 320 pages pp. 121-124

- Tamás Dusek
- A review of Peter Söderbaum, Understanding Sustainability Economics. Towards Pluralism in Economics, London, Sterling/VA: earthscan, 2008, 158 pages pp. 125-127

- Karl Georg Zinn
- A review of Ralph Harris in His Own Words, the Selected Writings of Lord Harris, Edited by Colin Robinson, Cheltenham, UK, Edward Elgar and the Institute of Economic Affairs, 2008, 343 pages pp. 128-133

- Valentin Cojanu
- Commentary on Teaching Economics with Podcasts, Literature and Movies pp. 134-136

- James Moulder
Volume 2, issue 1, 2008
- Incentives and reflective equilibrium in distributive justice debates pp. 5-19

- Julian Lamont
- The knowledge economy/society: the latest example of “Measurement without theory”? pp. 20-54

- Les Oxley, Paul Walker, David Thorns and Hong Wang
- Methodology and the practice of economists – a philosophical approach pp. 55-75

- Bjørn-Ivar Davidsen
- „Social embeddedness”: how new economic sociology goes into the offensive and meets the own roots pp. 76-114

- Dieter Bögenhold
- Not anything goes: a case for a restricted pluralism pp. 115-136

- Gustavo Marqués and Diego Weisman
- Book review: Gilles Dostaler, Keynes and his battles, Edgar Elgar, Cheltenham, UK, Northampton, MA, USA, 2007, 384 pages pp. 137-141

- Mircea T. Maniu
- Book review: Cristina Neesham, Human and social progress: projects and perspectives, VDM Verlag, Saarbrücken, 2008, 220 pages pp. 142-146

- James Moulder
- Book review: Akop P. Nazaretyan, Anthropology of violence and culture of self-organization. Essays in evolutionary historical psychology, 2nd edition, Moscow, URSS, 2008, 256 pages (in Russian) pp. 147-152

- Andrey Korotayev
Volume 1, issue 2, 2008
- Pluralism and Heterodoxy: Introduction to the Special Issue pp. 5-25

- Andrew Mearman
- Methodological Monism in Economics pp. 26-50

- Tamás Dusek
- Pluralism versus Heterodoxy in Economics and the Social Sciences pp. 51-72

- Randall Holcombe
- Plurality in Orthodox and Heterodox Economics pp. 73-96

- Sheila Dow
- Classifying Heterodoxy pp. 97-126

- Rick Szostak
- From Fragmentation to Ontologically Reflexive Pluralism pp. 127-150

- Vinca Bigo and Ioana Negru
- Dialectics and the Austrian School: A Surprising Commonality in the Methodology of Heterodox Economics? pp. 151-173

- Andy Denis
Volume 1, issue 1, 2007
- Editorial Introduction pp. 5-8

- Valentin Cojanu
- Economics, the Structures of Knowledge, and the Quest for a More Substantively Rational World pp. 9-22

- Richard E. Lee
- European Historical Economics and Globalisation pp. 23-53

- James Foreman-Peck
- On Ethics and the Economics of Development pp. 54-73

- Mozaffar Qizilbash
- Globalisation, the state and economic justice pp. 74-94

- Mark Beeson
- From a ‘Moral Philosopher’ to a ‘Poor’ Economist pp. 95-118

- Soumitra Sharma
- Developmental Freedom and Social Order: Rethinking the Relation between Work and Equality pp. 119-160

- Louise Haagh
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