Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
Emily Chamlee-Wright, V. Storr (2009)
Club Goods and Post-Disaster Community ReturnRationality and Society, 21
D. Lavoie, V. Storr (2011)
Distinction or dichotomy: Rethinking the line between thymology and praxeologyThe Review of Austrian Economics, 24
D. Lavoie (2000)
Culture and enterprise
D Prychitko (1991)
Marxism and worker’s self-management
Friedrich Hayek (1933)
The trend of economic thinkingJournal des Économistes et des Études Humaines, 2
Peter Boettke (1990)
The political economy of Soviet socialism
HG Gadamer (1976)
Philosophical hermeneutics, translated and edited by David E
Emily Chamlee-Wright, V. Storr (2009)
Filling the Civil-Society Vacuum: Post-Disaster Policy and Community ResponsePolitical Economy: Government Expenditures & Related Policies eJournal
L. Mises (1978)
The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science: An Essay on Method
C. Geertz (1974)
"From the Native's Point of View": On the Nature of Anthropological Understanding, 28
H. Gadamer, J. Weinsheimer, D. Marshall (1960)
Truth and Method
A. Roback, S. Freud, J. Riviere (1940)
Collected Papers Vol. I
HG Gadamer (1975)
Truth and method. Translated and edited by Garrett Barden and John Cumming
Emily Chamlee-Wright (2010)
The Cultural and Political Economy of Recovery: Social Learning in a post-disaster environment
E. Ostrom (2005)
Understanding Institutional Diversity
D. Lavoie (2011)
The interpretive dimension of economics: Science, hermeneutics, and praxeologyThe Review of Austrian Economics, 24
Emily Chamlee-Wright, V. Storr (2009)
“There’s No Place like New Orleans”: Sense of Place and Community Recovery in the Ninth Ward after Hurricane KatrinaJournal of Urban Affairs, 31
Charles Powers, A. Giddens (1985)
The Constitution Of Society
F. Hayek (1949)
Individualism and Economic Order
HG Gadamer (1975)
Hermeneutics and social scienceCultural Hermeneutics, 2
Emily Chamlee-Wright, V. Storr (2008)
Expectations of government’s response to disasterPublic Choice, 144
Christopher Coyne (2007)
After War: The Political Economy of Exporting Democracy
L. Mises (1961)
Epistemological Problems of Economics
VH Storr (2004)
Enterprising slaves and master pirates
L. Mises (1949)
Human Action: A Treatise on Economics
H. Gadamer (1975)
Hermeneutics and Social SciencePhilosophy & Social Criticism, 2
P. Ricoeur (1981)
Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences
P. Rabinow, W. Sullivan (1979)
Interpretive Social Science: A Reader
D. Strassmann (1994)
Feminist Thought and Economics: Or, What Do the Visigoths Know?The American Economic Review, 84
Elias Khalil (2004)
Dewey, pragmatism, and economic methodology
Emily Chamlee-Wright (2010)
Qualitative methods and the pursuit of economic understandingThe Review of Austrian Economics, 23
S. Horwitz (1992)
Monetary Evolution, Free Banking, and Economic Order
D. North, R. Thomas (1976)
The rise of the western world
L. Mises (1958)
Theory and history : an interpretation of social and economic evolution, 32
Paul Ricœur, Charles Kelbley (1965)
History and Truth
E Chamlee-Wright (1997)
The cultural foundations of economic development: Urban female entrepreneurship in Ghana
P. Leeson (2009)
The Invisible Hook: The Hidden Economics of Pirates
F. Hayek (1945)
The economic nature of the firm: The use of knowledge in society
R. Bernstein (1984)
Beyond Objectivism and Relativism: Science, Hermeneutics, and PraxisThe Philosophical Review, 94
R. Bierstedt, F. Hayek (1941)
The Counter-Revolution of Science
S Beaulier (2009)
The making of an African exception: How Botswana escaped the African tragedy (and how other African countries could do the same)
Emily Chamlee-Wright (1998)
The Cultural Foundations of Economic Development: Urban Female Entrepreneurship in Ghana by EMILY CHAMLEE-WRIGHT. Foundations of the Market Economy series, edited by Mario J. Rizzo and Lawrence H. White. London and New York, Routledge, 1997. Pp. 204, £45.00.The Journal of Modern African Studies, 36
A. Giddens (1979)
Central Problems In Social Theory
R. Fenn, C. Geertz (1973)
The Interpretation of Cultures
F. Hayek, W. Bartley (1989)
The Fatal Conceit: The Errors of Socialism
V. Storr, D. Lavoie, Peter Boettke (2004)
The Subjectivist Methodology of Austrian Economics and Dewey's Theory of Inquiry
A Evans (2007)
Subjectivist social change: The influence of culture and ideas on economic policy, unpublished PhD thesis, Department of Economics
V. Storr (2009)
Schütz on meaning and cultureThe Review of Austrian Economics, 23
M. Ferber, J. Nelson (1994)
Beyond Economic Man: Feminist Theory and EconomicsContemporary Sociology, 23
In his original essay advocating the interpretive turn in economics, Lavoie makes an explicit argument favoring (1) an economics of meaning and (2) the growth of knowledge through discursive rivalry within the scientific community. This paper contends that within Lavoie's explicit argument is an implicit case for a particular mode of discovery that resists the excesses of formalism common within the economics discipline and instead puts the investigator, the investigator's theoretical lens, and the subject under investigation in close proximity to one another. With the nodal points of this triangulated relationship in closer proximity to one another, an iterative learning process emerges that is itself a source of social scientific discovery. Further, and in connection to this mode of discovery, is the implicit case favoring qualitative research methods that correct the economics discipline's excessive reliance upon quantitative analysis in its empirical investigations that distances the investigator from the subject under investigation. The goal of this paper is to make these implicit arguments explicit.
The Review of Austrian Economics – Springer Journals
Published: Jan 22, 2011
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.