<p>The problems of interrelation between human economics and natural environment include scientific, technical, economic, demographic, social, political and other aspects that are studied by scientists of many specialities. One of the important aspects in scientific study of environmental and ecolog
Models, Mathematics, and Methodology in Economic Explanation
✍ Scribed by Donald W. Katzner
- Publisher
- Cambridge University Press
- Year
- 2017
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 261
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This book provides a practitioner's foundation for the process of explanatory model building, breaking down that process into five stages. Donald W. Katzner presents a concrete example with unquantified variable values to show how the five-stage procedure works. He describes what is involved in explanatory model building for those interested in this practice, while simultaneously providing a guide for those actually engaged in it. The combination of Katzner's focus on modeling and on mathematics, along with his focus on the explanatory performance of modeling, promises to become an important contribution to the field.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Front Matter
Title
Copyright
Table of Contents
Preface
1 Introduction
2 Economic Models and Explanation
3 The Stages of Model Building in Economics
3.1 Model Construction
3.2 The Difficulty with Ignoring Stages (i), (ii), and (v)
3.3 Models and Their Relation to the Real World
3.4 Recapitulation and Further Commentary
4 Models and Mathematics
5 Models and Measurement (or Lack Thereof)
5.1 Simultaneous Relations
5.2 Change Over Time
5.3 Optimization
5.4 Empirical Testing
5.5 Concluding Remark
6 Issues Relating to the Construction of Models from Scratch
6.1 Arithmomorphic Abstraction
6.2 Time and Change
6.3 From Process to Function
6.4 Limits and Power
7 An Example: The Efficiency of Organizational Forms
7.1 Preliminaries: Stage (i)
7.2 The Model: Stage (ii)
7.3 Administrative Cost Efficiency: Stage (iii)
7.4 Allocative Efficiency: Stage (iii)
7.5 The Potential for Empirical Testing: Stage (iv)
7.6 Cogency and Relevance: Stage (v)
8 The Implicit Assumption Requirements of Later-Stage Model Building
8.1 The Problem in Physics Terms
8.2 The Problem in Economic Terms
8.3 Concluding Remark
9 Ordinality and the Adequacy of Analytic Specification
9.1 The Three Approaches
9.2 Scale Transformations under Approach C
9.3 Preserving Functional Forms
9.4 Recapitulation and Further Commentary
10 Categories of Models
10.1 Individualism Versus Structuralism
10.2 Static Models Versus Dynamic Models
10.3 Certainty versus Uncertainty
11 Conclusion
Index
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