scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Author

九州大学文学部

Bio: 九州大学文学部 is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Philosophy of medicine & Western philosophy. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 109 citations.

Papers
More filters
Book
01 Jan 1962

112 citations


Cited by
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown that explanations in terms of individuals alone have never, as yet, been achieved, and that the more feasible version of explanations for individuals plus relations between them amounts to the introduction of social structure alongside individuals in the explanantia.
Abstract: Advocacy of 'methodological individualism' is widespread, especially among economists. However, the term is rarely defined with adequate precision and some crucial ambiguities are explored in this article. Among these is the commonplace ambivalence over whether explanations should be in terms of individuals alone, or in terms of individuals plus relations between them. It is shown that a great deal hinges on this subtle and often overlooked distinction in explanantia. In particular, explanations in terms of individuals alone have never, as yet, been achieved. Furthermore, the more feasible version of explanations in terms of individuals plus relations between them amounts to the introduction of social structure alongside individuals in the explanantia. Serious questions remain whether this version warrants the one-sided emphasis on individuals in the term 'methodological individualism'.

330 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors found evidence that common law countries experienced faster economic growth than civil law countries during the period 1960-1992 and suggested that the difference reflects the common law's greater orientation toward private economic activity and the civil law's more orientation toward government intervention.
Abstract: Recent finance scholarship finds that countries with legal systems based on the common law provide better investor protections and have more developed financial markets than civil law countries. These findings echo Hayek's claims of the superiority of English to French legal institutions. In this paper, I present evidence that common law countries experienced faster economic growth than civil law countries during the period 1960-1992. I suggest that the difference reflects the common law's greater orientation toward private economic activity and the civil law's greater orientation toward government intervention.

210 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors approach the "market versus state" issue from the perspective of constitutional political economy, a research program that has been advanced as a principal alternative to traditional welfare economics and its perspective on the relation between market and state.
Abstract: The paper approaches the ‘market versus state’ issue from the perspective of constitutional political economy, a research program that has been advanced as a principal alternative to traditional welfare economics and its perspective on the relation between market and state. Constitutional political economy looks at market and state as different kinds of social arenas in which people may realize mutual gains from voluntary exchange and cooperation. The working properties of these arenas depend on their respective constitutions, i.e. the rules of the game that define the constraints under which individuals are allowed, in either arena, to pursue their interests. It is argued that ‘improving’ markets means to adopt and to maintain an economic constitution that enhances consumer sovereignty, and that ‘improvement’ in the political arena means to adopt and to maintain constitutional rules that enhance citizen sovereignty.

162 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine critically and contribute to the burgeoning multi-disciplinary literature on markets as complex adaptive systems (CAS) and argue that the epi-phenomena of biological systems and socioeconomic systems are anything but complex.
Abstract: Few will argue that the epi-phenomena of biological systems and socio-economic systems are anything but complex. The purpose of this Feature is to examine critically and contribute to the burgeoning multi-disciplinary literature on markets as complex adaptive systems (CAS). The new sciences of complexity, the principles of self-organisation and emergence along with the methods of evolutionary computation and artificially intelligent agent models have been developed in a multi-disciplinary fashion. The cognoscenti here consider that complex systems whether natural or artificial, physical, biological or socio-economic can be characterised by a unifying set of principles. Further, it is held that these principles mark a paradigm shift from earlier ways of viewing such phenomenon.

150 citations