ABSTRACT

Terence Hutchison has made a unique contribution to debates in the history of economic thought and in economic methodology. The material collected here - much of which is appearing for the first time - includes some of the most significant and provocative parts of this contribution. Working from the principle that an idea that offends no one is not worth entertaining, the essays selected here offer a major reinterpretation of what has been called `the Smithian Revolution', and especially of Ricardo, plus a re-assessment of subjectivism and the methodology of the Austrian school.

part |185 pages

Progress and Regress in Political Economy

chapter |23 pages

On The Interpretation and Misinterpretation of Economic Literature

The Preposterous Case of David Ricardo 1

chapter |20 pages

‘Ricardian Politics'

Another Version of Ricardian Hagiography? 1

chapter |18 pages

From ‘Dismal Science' to ‘Positive Economics'

A Century-and-a-Half of Progress? 1

part |120 pages

Subjectivism, Methods and AIMs