Science and Ceremony : : The Institutional Economics of C. E. Ayres / / ed. by William Patton Culbertson, William Breit.

Clarence Edwin Ayres was the leading American institutionalist economist in the post–World War II era. His innovative theories concerning the causes and significance of technological change provided the philosophical framework for that school of economics called institutionalism. In his recognition...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter University of Texas Press Complete eBook-Package Pre-2000
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Place / Publishing House:Austin : : University of Texas Press, , [2021]
©1976
Year of Publication:2021
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (228 p.)
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Other title:Frontmatter --
Contents --
Foreword --
Acknowledgments --
Introduction --
Clarence Edwin Ayres: An Intellectual's Portrait --
Clarence Ayres's Place in the History of American Economics: An Interim Assessment --
C. E. Ayres on the Industrial Revolution --
Clarence Ayres and the Roots of Economic Progress --
Technology and the Price System --
Limits to Growth: Biospheric or Institutional? --
Ayres's Views on Moral Relativism --
Methods and Morals in Economics: The Ayres-Knight Discussion --
Clarence Ayres's Economics and Sociology --
Clarence E. Ayres as a University Teacher --
Notes on the Contributors --
Index
Summary:Clarence Edwin Ayres was the leading American institutionalist economist in the post–World War II era. His innovative theories concerning the causes and significance of technological change provided the philosophical framework for that school of economics called institutionalism. In his recognition that the critical economic issues of the future would be the realization of the full economic potential of industrial society and the development of the third world, he was at least twenty years ahead of his time. In addition, Ayres's influence as an economics teacher at the University of Texas at Austin went well beyond the discipline of economics to students of anthropology, psychology, philosophy, education, and even music and art. This book constitutes the first major appraisal of the work and influence of C. E. Ayres. The essays are written from a transatlantic as well as a national viewpoint and do not evince anyone ideological bias. As John Kenneth Galbraith says in his Foreword, the essays are not meant as a monument to Ayres; instead, they critique what he thought and did, showing "his range of interests, his diligence, his originality of mind and method." Contributions to the volume are "Clarence Edwin Ayres: An Intellectual's Portrait" by editors William Breit and William Patton Culbertson, Jr.; "Clarence Ayres's Place in the History of American Economics: An Interim Assessment" by A. W. Coats; "C. E. Ayres on the Industrial Revolution" by R. M. Hartwell; "Clarence Ayres and the Roots of Economic Progress" by S. Herbert Frankel; "Technology and the Price System" by W. W. Rostow; "Limits to Growth: Biospheric or Institutional?" by Joseph J. Spengler; "Science's Feet of Clay" by Gordon Tullock; "Ayres's Views on Moral Relativism" by Alfred F. Chalk; "Methods and Morals in Economics: The Ayres-Knight Discussion" by James M. Buchanan; " Clarence Ayres's Economics and Sociology" by Talcott Parsons; and "Clarence E. Ayres as a University Teacher" by Marion J. Levy, Jr.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9780292769922
9783110745351
DOI:10.7560/775237
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: ed. by William Patton Culbertson, William Breit.