<i>‘An impressive work that reflects a career spent in dedicated study of the most fundamental problems of the social sciences and will be of interest to scholars working in areas related to the philosophy of the social sciences or the history of liberal thought.’</i>
- Karras J. Lambert, The Independent Review: A Journal of Political Economy,
<i>‘Wagner’s book provides a deeper understanding of both the economy and the larger society and highlights some shortcomings of contemporary mainstream economics. Every page has thought-provoking ideas that will reward the book’s readers.’</i><br />
- Randall G. Holcombe, The Independent Review: A Journal of Political Economy,
<i>‘In </i>Rethinking Economics as Social Theory, Richard E. Wagner offers an erudite and profound alternative to Max U, one that seeks to recover and embellish the insights of the Scottish Enlightenment. He invites us to consider social problems encompassing moral elements and to make room for complexity and time. In the spirit of Frank Knight, Wagner studies a “cacophonous” subject—society—comprising ever-shifting groups and subgroups and he reminds us that social systems are constantly in motion.’
- Sandra J Peart, University of Richmond US,
<i>‘Richard Wagner creates an ingenious form of social theory that both integrates and transcends a variety of orthodoxies and heterodoxies. Using insights from complexity theory, network theory, and computational modeling, Wagner brings new life to ideas about spontaneous ordering within societies initially articulated during the Scottish Enlightenment, showing those insights to be as relevant today as when they were initially articulated.’</i>
- Paul Dragos Aligica, George Mason University, US,
<i>‘Taking seriously the task of rethinking economics, Richard Wagner has gone to the center of it. We are spirited beings capable of hoping, hating, learning, and doing, not flesh-covered robots enslaved to our programming. Our liberty of self-construction is hell on administrators, but endlessly fascinating for the true student of society. Buy this book, read it all, and walk away wiser.’</i>
- Roger Koppl, Syracuse University, US,
<i>‘“Economic theory began as social theory,” writes Richard Wagner, and in this new book he restores the analytical connections. Wagner exposes the limitations of most contemporary theorizing to grapple successfully with the complexity of the human condition, which gives rise to both social cooperation and coalitional conflict. Market–state dualism, in both theory and practice, has led to an expansion of public ordering, but Wagner suggests that it is only by broadening the scope of private ordering that we can invite human spiritedness back to the drama of our lives in society.’</i>
- Lenore T. Ealy, Universidad Francisco Marroquín, Guatemala,
Rethinking Economics as Social Theory moves away from the traditional review of analytical exercises and associated data and illustrates an enlightening scheme of thought where human societies are heterogeneous and not homogeneous and where change is continually in motion. Furthermore, Wagner theorises that economizing is a universal form of human action that plays out in numerous substantive directions and shows cooperation and conflict to have a yin-and-yang relationship.
This illuminating book will prove an excellent resource for economists interested in working outside of comparative statics as well as social scientists looking for a broader vision of economics. Philosophers and those working in the field of biological sciences will also find this an informative read.