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Chapter 18 of The General Theory ‘further analysed’: economics as a way of thinking

Anna Carabelli () and Mario Cedrini

Cambridge Journal of Economics, 2014, vol. 38, issue 1, 23-47

Abstract: This paper revisits chapter 18 of Keynes’s The General Theory in the light of A Treatise on Probability. It shows that the notions of cause and independence used to discuss the relationships between the variables of The General Theory in the chapter are related to the concept of ‘independence for knowledge’, which concerns logical connections between arguments rather than material connections between events. We demonstrate that such logical connections are rediscussed in chapters 19–21 by the use of a two-stage methodology, which allows for probable repercussions between factors heretofore taken as independent and removes the simplifying assumptions previously introduced. After stressing the methodological continuity this method provides with the analysis of credit cycles in A Treatise on Money, we argue that chapter 18 is an indispensable tool to decode the text structure of The General Theory and show that Keynes’s economic theory is in truth an analytical method allowing readers to emulate his efforts to grasp the complexity of the economic material.

Date: 2014
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