32nd Annual Meeting of the History of Economics...

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32nd Annual Meeting of the History of Economics Society June 24-27, 2005

University of Puget Sound, Tacoma, WA, USA

(Revised) Final Program of Sessions

Friday June 24, 2005 HES Executive Committee Meeting: 1:30 PM - 5:30 PM (if needed) Room: Wyatt 107 On Site Registration: 4:00 PM - 7:00 PM (continuing through Saturday) Room: Wyatt Hall Lobby Salmon Barbecue Buffet: 7:00 PM - 8:30PM Trimble Hall Patio (Ticket Required)

Saturday June 25, 2005

Sessions I-A: 8:00 AM-10:00 AM Session I-A-1: Hayekian Themes Room: Wyatt 109 Chair: Steve Horwitz, St. Lawrence University (sghorwitz@stlawu.edu) Bruce Caldwell, University of North Carolina – Greensboro Editor’s Introduction – Collected Works Edition of the Road to Serfdom (bjcaldwe@uncg.edu) Discussant: Steve Horwitz, St. Lawrence University (sghorwitz@stlawu.edu) Erik Angner, University of Alabama at Birmingham The History of Hayek's Theory of Cultural Evolution Revisited

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(ejast4@pitt.edu) Discussant: Bruce Caldwell, University of North Carolina - Greensboro (bjcaldwe@uncg.edu) Kayoko Misaki, Shiga University Walras’s Organized Free Competition from a Hayekian Perspective (kayoko@biwako.shiga-u.ac.jp) Discussant: Carlo Zappia University of Siena (zappia@unisi.it) Doug MacKenzie, Ramapo College Social Dividends and General Rules in Economic Planning (dmackenz_2000@yahoo.com) Discussant: Carlo Zappia University of Siena (zappia@unisi.it) Session I-A-2: New Voices on Adam Smith Room: Wyatt 307 Chair: Jerry Evensky, Syracuse University (jevensky@maxwell.syr.edu) Edith Kuiper, University of Amsterdam Adam Smith and His Feminist Contemporaries (E.Kuiper@uva.nl) Discussant: Patrick Frierson, Whitman College (frierspr@whitman.edu) Leonidas Montes, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez Newtonian Influence on Adam Smith: A Reassessment (leonidas.montes@uai.cl) Discussant: Jerry Evensky, Syracuse University (jevensky@maxwell.syr.edu) Maria Pia Paganelli, Yeshiva University Vanity and the Daedalian Wings of Paper Money in Adam Smith (maria_paganelli@yahoo.com) Discussant: Jeffrey Young, St. Lawrence University (jyoung@stlawu.edu)

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Session I-A-3: Operations Research to the Rescue Room: Wyatt 313 Chair: Philip Mirowski, University of Notre Dame (pmirowsk@nd.edu) 1. Paul Erickson, University of Wisconsin Optimism and Optimization: Game Theory and Cultures of Rationality in Postwar Operations Research (pherickson@wisc.edu) Discussant: Tinne Hoff Kjeldsen, University of Roskilde (thk@ruc.dk) 2. Judy L. Klein, Mary Baldwin College Inventory Control and Arbitrage in Time: Mid-Twentieth Century Attempts to Turn the U.S. Government into a Rational Producer (jklein@mbc.edu) Discussant: Paul Erickson, University of Wisconsin (pherickson@wisc.edu) 3. Philip Mirowski, University of Notre Dame Thirteen Theses on the History of Postwar Neoclassical Price Theory (pmirowsk@nd.edu) Discussant: Judy L. Klein, Mary Baldwin College (jklein@mbc.edu) 4. Tinne Hoff Kjeldsen, University of Roskilde The Rise of Mathematical Programming in the Wake of World War II (thk@ruc.dk) Discussant: Philip Mirowski, University of Notre Dame (pmirowsk@nd.edu) Session I-A-4: Religion, Morality, and Economic Thought Room: Wyatt 301 Chair: James Henderson, Valparaiso University (James.Henderson@Valpo.edu)

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1. Dell Champlin, Eastern Illinois University Social Reform, Private Salvation, and Laissez-Faire: the Complex Connection Between American Protestantism and Economics (cfdpc1@ux1.cts.eiu.edu) Discussant: Tim Leonard, Princeton University (tleonard@Princeton.edu) 2. Antonio Almodovar and Pedro Teixeira, University of Porto Before Rerum Novarum: Catholic Political Economy in the Late 1830s (amal@fep.up.pt) (pedrotx@fep.up.pt) Discussant: Anthony Waterman, University of Manitoba (watermn@cc.umanitoba.ca) 3. James Henderson, Valparaiso University Is Push-Pin as Valuable as Poetry? The Romantic Poets vs. The Classical Economists (James.Henderson@Valpo.edu) Discussant: Craufurd Goodwin, Duke University (goodwin@econ.duke.edu) 4. David Andrews, State University of New York – Oswego Keynes and the Moral Purpose of the Market (dandrew1@oswego.edu) Discussant: Brad Bateman, Grinnell College (Bateman@grinnell.edu) Session I-A-5: Utility, Happiness, Welfare, and All That Room: Wyatt 101 Chair: John Davis, University of Amsterdam and Marquette University (john.davis@mu.edu) Mauro Boianovsky, University of Brasilia Dennis Robertson on Utility and Welfare in the 1950s (boianovs@unb.br) Discussant: Neil Niman, University of New Hampshire (neil@orbit.unh.edu) Steve Medema, University of Colorado at Denver Pigou’s Prima Facie Case: Welfare Economics in Theory and Practice (smedema@carbon.cudenver.edu)

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Discussant: Mauro Boianovsky, University of Brasilia (boianovs@unb.br) John Davis, University of Amsterdam and Marquette University Personal Identity, Capabilities, and Happiness (john.davis@mu.edu) Discussant: Harold Kincaid, University of Alabama (kincaid@uab.edu) Maria Eugãnia Mata, Universidade Nova de Lisboa Debate on Cardinal Versus Ordinal Utility (memata@fe.unl.pt) Discussant: John Davis, University of Amsterdam and Marquette University (john.davis@mu.edu)

Saturday June 25, 2005 Sessions I-B: 10:30 AM-12:00 Noon

I-B-1: A Companion to Economics and Philosophy: A Roundtable Room: Wyatt 301 Moderator: John Davis, University of Amsterdam and Marquette University (john.davis@marquette.edu) 1. Peter Boettke, George Mason University (pboettke@gmu.edu) 2. Alain Marciano, University de Reims Champagne Ardenne (a.marciano@wanadoo.fr) 3. Margaret Schabas, University of British Columbia (schabas@interchange.ubc.ca) 4. Francesco Guala, University of Exeter (f.guala@club-internet.fr) 5. John Davis, University of Amsterdam and Marquette University (john.davis@marquette.edu) Session I-B-2: Roundtable on Cosmic Optimism

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Room: Wyatt 101 Moderator: David Levy, George Mason University (dlevy@gmu.edu) 2. A. M. C. Waterman, University of Manitoba (watermn@cc.umanitoba.ca) 2. Leonidas Montes, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez (leonidas.montes@uai.cl) 3. Sandy Peart, Baldwin-Wallace College (speart@bw.edu) 4. David Levy, George Mason University (dlevy@gmu.edu) Session I-B-3: History of General Equilibrium Theory Room: Wyatt 307 Chair: Stephen Meardon, Bowdoin College (smeardon@bowdoin.edu) 1. Becchio Giandomenica, University of Turin The Economic Theory of Wiener Kreis and Colloquia Mathematica: The Complex Role of Karl Menger (giandomenica.becchio@unito.it) Discussant: E. Roy Weintraub, Duke University (erw@duke.edu) 2. Annie L. Cot, GRESE, University of Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne Harvard’s Pareto Circle (Annie.Cot@univ-paris1.fr) Discussant: E. Roy Weintraub, Duke University (erw@duke.edu) 3. S. Abu Turab Rizvi, University of Vermont The Sonnenschein-Mantel-Debreu Results 30 Years Later (abu.rizvi@uvm.edu) Discussant: Stephen Meardon, Bowdoin College (smeardon@bowdoin.edu)

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Session I-B-4: Macroeconomic Themes Room: Wyatt 313 Chair: Robert Leeson, Murdoch University (leeson@murdoch.edu.au) 1. James Ahiakpor, California State University – East Bay The Phillips Curve: An Illustration of the Classical Forced-Saving Principle (jahiakpor@csuhayward.edu) Discussant: Robert Leeson, Murdoch University (leeson@murdoch.edu.au) 2. Pat Raines (Belmont University) & Charles Leathers (University of Alabama) Deflation and Inflation: A Comparative Analysis of Veblen and Schumpeter (rainesp@mail.belmont.edu) Discussant: Robert Dimand, Brock University (dimand@brocku.ca) 3. Marin Muzhani, University of Florence Trade Cycles in Harrod and Hicks: From the Instability Principle to the Acceleration Principle (muzhani@interfree.it) Discussant: Robert Dimand, Brock University (dimand@brocku.ca) Session I-B-5: Roundtable on Hayek's Challenge Room: Wyatt 109 Moderator: Steve Medema, University of Colorado - Denver (smedema@carbon.cudenver.edu) Warren Samuels, Michigan State University (warrensamuels@bigplanet.com) Philip Mirowski, University of Notre Dame (pmirowsk@nd.edu) Steve Horwitz, St. Lawrence University (sghorwitz@stlawu.edu) Donald Moggridge, University of Toronto

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(d.moggridge@utoronto.ca) Bruce Caldwell, University of North Carolina - Greensboro (Bruce_Caldwell@uncg.edu)

Saturday June 25, 2005Sessions I-C: 1:30 PM-2:30 PM

Session I-C-1: Italian Economists in Britain and the U. S. in the Early 20th Century Room: Wyatt 301 Chair: Donald Moggridge, University of Toronto (d.moggridge@utoronto.ca) 1. Daniela Parisi, Catholic University of Milan Rockefeller-granted Competence Transfers to an International Organization: A Case Study (daniela.parisi@unicatt.it) Discussant: Cristina Marcuzzo, University of Rome (cristina.marcuzzo@uniroma1.it) 1. Cristina Marcuzzo, University of Rome Piero Sraffa at the University of Cambridge. (cristina.marcuzzo@uniroma1.it) Discussant: Donald Moggridge, University of Toronto (d.moggridge@utoronto.ca) Session I-C-2: Jevons and Marshall Room: Wyatt 101 Chair: Sandra Peart, Baldwin-Wallace College (speart@bw.edu) 1. Neil Niman, University of New Hampshire Lyell’ Uniformity Principle and the Development of Marshallian Economics (neil@orbit.unh.edu)

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Discussant: Alain Marciano, University de Reims (a.marciano@wanadoo.fr) 2. Nakano Satoko, Meijigakuin University Jevon’s Market View Through Dynamic Trajectories of Bilateral Exchanges; Market Interactions in the Non-Walrasian Tradition (satokon@eco.meijigakuin.ac.jp) Discussant: Sandra Peart, Baldwin-Wallace College (speart@bw.edu) Session I-C-3: Rhetoric and Value Room: Wyatt 109 Chair: Uskali Maki, Erasmus University (umaki@fwb.eur.nl) 1. Menno Rol, University of Groningen Defending Subjective Value Theory: De-Idealization Solving Explanatory Undetermination (m.rol@philos.rug.nl) Discussant: Erik Angner, University of Alabama – Birmingham (ejast4@pitt.edu) 2. Maurice Lagueux, University of Montreal Ideologies, Value Judgements and Rhetoric in Economics (maurice.lagueux@umontreal.ca) Discussant: Uskali Maki, Erasmus University (umaki@fwb.eur.nl) Session I-C-4: Music, Art, and Economics Room: Wyatt 313 Chair: Craufurd Goodwin, Duke University (goodwin@econ.duke.edu) 1. Daniel Green, Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University From Quill-to-Quill to Peer-to-Peer: Classical Music Markets and What We Should Have Learned by Now (dagreen1@yu.edu) Discussant: Craufurd Goodwin, Duke University (goodwin@econ.duke.edu)

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2. Gilles Dostaler, University of Quebec at Montreal Keynes and Art (dostaler.gilles@uqam.ca) Discussant: Craufurd Goodwin, Duke University (goodwin@econ.duke.edu) Session I-C-5: Pragmatism and Economics Room: Wyatt 307 Chair: Malcolm Rutherford, University of Victoria (rutherfo@uvic.ca) 1. Charles McCann, University of Pittsburgh John Dewey: From Spontaneous Order to Directed Action (crmccann@aol.com) Discussant: Malcolm Rutherford, University of Victoria (rutherfo@uvic.ca) 2. James Wible, University of New Hampshire Peirce's Persistent Interest in Economics: An Introduction (jrwible@cisunix.unh.edu) Discussant: Kevin Hoover, University of California – Davis (kdhoover@ucdavis.edu)

Plenary Session I 3:00 PM-4:00 PM

Concert Hall Fischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance Perry Mehrling, Barnard College and Columbia University

Plenary Session II 4:15 PM-5:15 PM

Concert Hall Roundtable on Keynes Moderator: Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham

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(R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk) 1. Brad Bateman, Grinnell College (bateman@grinnell.edu) 2. Kevin Hoover, University of California - Davis (kdhoover@ucdavis.edu) 3. Cristina Marcuzzo, University of Rome (cristina.marcuzzo@uniroma1.it) 4. Craufurd Goodwin, Duke University (goodwin@econ.duke.edu)

HES Business Meeting 5:30 PM

Concert Hall

Sunday June 26, 2005Sessions II-A: 8:30 AM-10:00 AM

II-A-1: Classical Themes Room: Wyatt 301 Chair: Jeffrey Young, St. Lawrence University (jyoung@stlawu.edu) 1. John Berdell, DePaul University Prices and Capital in Cantillion’s Essay (jberdell@depaul.edu) Discussant: David Kammerling Smith, Eastern Illinois University (cfdk@ux1.cts.eiu.edu) 2. Julian Libreros, Universidad Externado de Colombia Thomas De Quincey's Political Economy (julibre66@hotmail.com) Discussant: James Henderson, Valparaiso University (James.Henderson@Valpo.edu) 3. Arild Sather, Agder University College Pufendorf as a Predecessor of Hutcheson and Smith

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(Arild.Sather@hia.no) Discussant: John Berdell, DePaul University (jberdell@depaul.edu) Session II-A-2: Keynesian Themes Room: Wyatt 109 Chair: Mauro Boianovsky, Universidade de Brasilia (boianovs@unb.br) 1. Donald Moggridge, University of Toronto Harry Johnson and Keynesian Economics (d.moggridge@utoronto.ca) Discussant: Daniel Hammond, Wake Forest University (hammond@wfu.edu) 2. Mauro Boianovsky, Universidade de Brasilia and Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham Disequilibrium Macroeconomics: an Episode in the Transformation of Modern Macroeconomics (boianovs@unb.br)(R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk) Discussant: Kevin Hoover, University of California – Davis (kdhoover@ucdavis.edu) 3. Robert Leeson, Murdoch University The Collected Writings of Great Thinkers in Economics: Some Historical and Practical Issues (leeson@murdoch.edu.au) Discussant: Donald Moggridge, University of Toronto (d.moggridge@utoronto.ca) Session II-A-3: Methodological Issues Room: Wyatt 101 Chair: John Davis, University of Amsterdam and Marquette University (john.davis@marquette.edu) 1. Alain Marciano, University de Reims Champagne Ardenne Political Economy and Hume's Theory of Human Cognition (a.marciano@wanadoo.fr)

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Discussant: Margaret Schabas, University of British Columbia (schabas@interchange.ubc.ca) 2. Amos Witztum, London Metropolitan University Economic Methodology and the Concept of Economic Justice (A.Witztum@lse.ac.uk) Discussant: John Davis, University of Amsterdam and Marquette University (john.davis@marquette.edu) 3. Larry Boland, Simon Fraser University The Trouble with Mirowski: On Reviewing "Machine Dreams" (boland@sfu.ca) Discussant: Philip Mirowski, University of Notre Dame (pmirowsk@nd.edu) Session II-A-4: Markets and Subjectivism (YS-I) Room: Wyatt 307 Chair: Steve Horwitz, St. Lawrence University (sghorwitz@stlawu.edu) 1. Gregor Zwirn, University of Paris 1 Methodological Individualism and Subjectivism in the Writings of Lachmann: A Realist Clarification (gz207@cam.ac.uk) Discussant: Bruce Caldwell, University of North Carolina - Greensboro (bjcaldwe@uncg.edu) 2. Yoshino Yusuke, Kyoto University Hayek’s Subjectivism contra Shackle (yusuke-y@ijk.com) Discussant: Bruce Caldwell, University of North Carolina - Greensboro (bjcaldwe@uncg.edu) 3. Neel Chamilall, University of Paul Cezanne Whiteheadian Vespers (neelchamilall@hotmail.com Discussant: Steve Horwitz, St. Lawrence University (sghorwitz@stlawu.edu)

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Session II-A-5: Mathematics, Economic Science, and Rhetoric (YS-II) Room: Wyatt 313 Chair: Malcolm Rutherford, University of Victoria (rutherfo@uvic.ca) 1. Huascar Pessali, University of Hertfordshire Rhetorical Transactions and Transaction Cost Economics (pessali@btinternet.com) Discussant: Neil Niman, University of New Hampshire (neil@orbit.unh.edu) 2. David Seim, Iowa State University The “Ames School” of Economics, 1934-1950 (dseim@iastate.edu) Discussant: Malcolm Rutherford, University of Victoria (rutherfo@uvic.ca)

Sunday June 26, 2005Sessions II-B: 10:30 AM-12:00 Noon

Session II-B-1: New Perspectives on Eighteenth Century French Political Economy: A Roundtable Room: Wyatt 301 Moderator: Charles Loïc, University of Paris 2 and INED (charles@ined.fr) 1. David Kammerling Smith, Eastern Illinois University Economic Policymaking and the Language of Economics: The French Council of Commerce 1700-1740 (cfdks@ux1.cts.eiu.edu) 2. Gilbert Faccarello (University of Paris 2) and Philippe Steiner (University of Lille 3) Religion, Moral Philosophy and French Political Economy (Gilbert.Faccarello@univ-paris1.fr)(Philippe.Steiner@dauphine.fr) 3. Charles Loïc and C. Théré, University of Paris 2 and INED

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The Writing Workshop of Francois Quesnay and the Making of Physiocracy 1757-1764 (charles@ined.fr) (ch_there@ined.fr) Session II-B-2: Capital and Exchange Value Room: Wyatt 307 Chair: Avi Cohen, York University (avicohen@yorku.ca) 1. Sasan Fayazmanesh, California State University - Fresno Marx’s Primitive Communities, Equation of Exchange and the Proper Point of Departure (sasanf@csufresno.edu) Discussant: Warren Samuels, Michigan State University (warrensamuels@bigplanet.com) 2. Adam Lutzker, University of Michigan - Flint Capital Accumulation Metaphors: Human, Social, and Cultural Capital in the Social Sciences (alutzker@umflint.edu) Discussant: Avi Cohen, York University (avicohen@yorku.ca) Session II-B-3: Complexity, Coordination, and Calculation Room: Wyatt 101 Chair: Erik Angner, University of Alabama – Birmingham (ejast4@pitt.edu) 1. Neel Chamilall, University of Paul-Cezanne How Far is Freiburg from Vienna (and Santa Fe)? Menger and Hayek on the Complexity of the Market (neelchamilall@hotmail.com) Discussant: Philip Mirowski University of Notre Dame (pmirowsk@nd.edu) 2. Doug MacKenzie, Ramapo College Oskar Lange and the Impossibility of Economic Calculation (dmackenz_2000@yahoo.com) Discussant: Peter Boettke, George Mason University (pboettke@gmu.edu)

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Session II-B-4: Monetary Theory Room: Wyatt 313 Chair: Perry Mehrling, Barnard College and Columbia University (pgm10@columbia.edu) 1. Odile Lakomski-Laguerre, Universite de Picarde Jules Verne, Amiens A Credit Theory of Money: Schumpeter versus Hawtrey (odile.lakomski@u-picardie.fr) Discussant: Perry Mehrling, Barnard College and Columbia University (pgm10@columbia.edu) 2. George Horwich, Purdue University The Monetary-Interest Rate Mechanism: A Restatement and Critique of Historical Views (ghorwich@purdue.edu) Discussant: Odile Lakomski-Laguerre (odile.lakomski@u-picardie.fr) 3. Toshiaki Hirai, Sophia University How Did Wicksell’s Theory of Cumulative Process Influence Keynes and His Contemporaries (hirai-t@sophia.ac.jp) Discussant: George Horwich, Purdue University (ghorwich@purdue.edu) Session II-B-5: Adam Smith on Policy Room: Wyatt 109 Chair: Jerry Evensky, Syracuse University (jevensky@maxwell.syr.edu) 1. Glenn Hueckel, Pomona College In the Heat of Writing: Polemics and the Problem of Corn Bounty in the Wealth of Nations (Glenn.Hueckel@pomona.edu) Discussant: Jeffrey Young, St. Lawrence University (jyoung@stlawu.edu)

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2. Tom Ross, McGowan School of Business Adam Smith on the Goals and Failings of Educational Institutions (tkross@kings.edu) Discussant: Jerry Evensky, Syracuse University (jevensky@maxwell.syr.edu) 3. Maria Brandao and Antonio Almodovar, CEMPRE, FEP-UP Smith and Say on the Middle Class (fbrandao@fep.up.pt)(amal@fep.up.pt) Discussant: Tom Ross, McGowan School of Business (tkross@kings.edu)

Plenary Session III 1:30 PM-2:45 PM

Roundtable on Robert Heilbroner, The Worldly Philosophers, and the History of Economic Thought Concert Hall Moderator: Avi Cohen, York University (avicohen@yorku.ca) 1. Robert Dimand, Brock University (dimand@brocku.ca) 2. Mathew Forstater, University of Missouri – Kansas City (ForstaterM@umkc.edu) 3. Susan Haack, University of Miami (shaack@mail.as.miami.edu) 4. Warren Samuels, Michigan State University (warrensamuels@bigplanet.com)

Sunday June 26, 2005Sessions II-C: 3:00 PM-5:00 PM

Session II-C-1: The Chicago School as Historiographic Problem

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Room: Wyatt 109 Chair: Sonja Amadae, New School for Social Research (amadaes@newschool.edu) 1. Philip Mirowski, University of Notre Dame The Road to the Chicago School (pmirowsk@nd.edu) Discussant: Daniel Hammond, Wake Forest University (hammond@wfu.edu) 2. Rob van Horn (University of Notre Dame) The Antitrust Project and Chicago Law & Economics (rvanhorn@nd.edu) Discussant: Daniel Hammond, Wake Forest University (hammond@wfu.edu) 3. Daniel Hammond, Wake Forest University More Fiber than Thread? Evidence on the Hands-Mirowski Yarn (hammond@wfu.edu) Discussant: S. Abu Turab Rizvi, University of Vermont (abu.rizvi@uvm.edu) 4. Sonja Amadae, New School for Social Research Virginia Public Choice and the Chicago School (amadaes@newschool.edu) Discussant: Peter Boettke, George Mason University (pboettke@gmu.edu) Session II-C-2: Evidence, Experiment, and Rational Choice Room: Wyatt 307 Chair: Uskali Mäki, Erasmus University (umaki@fwb.eur.nl) 1. Julian Reiss, LSE and Complutense University Madrid Evidence, Causal Inference and Mechanisms in Economics (j.reiss@lse.ac.uk) Discussant: Harold Kincaid, University of Alabama (kincaid@uab.edu)

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2. Kyu Sang Lee, University of Notre Dame Smith Responding to Simon by Subsuming Bounded Rationality of Conscious Cognition Under Rationality of Unconscious Cognition (kyuslee@gmail.com) Discussant: Julian Reiss, LSE and Complutense University Madrid (j.reiss@lse.ac.uk) 3. Carlo Zappia (University of Siena) and Marcello Basili (University of Siena) Ambiguity and Uncertainty in Ellsberg and Shackle (zappia@unisi.it) Discussant: Larry Boland, Simon Fraser University (boland@sfu.ca) 4. Harold Kincaid, University of Alabama Experimental Economics and Issues in Philosophy of Science (kincaid@uab.edu) Discussant: Kyu Sang Lee, University of Notre Dame (kyuslee@gmail.com Session II-C-3: The LSE and English Economics Room: Wyatt 101 Chair: Warren Samuels, Michigan State University (warrensamuels@bigplanet.com) 1. James Thomas, London School of Economics Was There Ever a “London” School of Economics? (j.thomas@lse.ac.uk) Discussant: Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham (R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk) 2. Malcolm Rutherford, University of Victoria American Institutionalism and Its English Connections (rutherfo@uvic.ca) Discussant: Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham (R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk) 3. Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham Hobson, Pigou, and Inter-War Welfare Economics

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(R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk) Discussant: Steve Medema, University of Colorado at Denver (smedema@carbon.cudenver.edu) 4. Susan Howson, University of Toronto Lionel Robbins and English Economics (showson@chass.utoronto.ca) Discussant: Steve Medema, University of Colorado at Denver (smedema@carbon.cudenver.edu) Session II-C-4: Roundtable on Life Writing Room: Wyatt 313 Moderator: E. Roy Weintraub, Duke University (erw@duke.edu) 1. Bruce Caldwell, University of North Carolina - Greensboro (Bruce_Caldwell@uncg.edu) 2. Robert Dimand, Brock University (dimand@brocku.ca) 3. Evert Schoorl, Groningen University (e.schoorl@eco.rug.nl) 4. Evelyn Forget, University of Manitoba (Forget@cc.umanitoba.ca) Session II-C-5: Adam Smith’s Moral Theory Room: Wyatt 204 Chair: Glenn Hueckel, Pomona College (Glenn.Hueckel@pomona.edu) 1. Amos Witztum, London Metropolitan University Smith’s Theory of Action and the Morality of Natural Liberty (A.Witztum@londonmet.ac.uk, A. Witztum@lse.ac.uk) Discussant: Leonidas Montes, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez (leonidas.montes@uai.cl)

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2. Maria Paganelli, Yeshiva University Self-Interest in Wealth of Nations and Theory of Moral Sentiments: The Adam Smith Problem (maria_paganelli@yahoo.com) Discussant: Leonidas Montes, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez (leonidas.montes@uai.cl) 3. Satoshi Niimura, Okayama University Economic Development and Inequality in Adam Smith (niimurasatoshi@yahoo.co.jp) Discussant: Jeffrey Young, St. Lawrence University (jyoung@stlawu.edu) 4. Patrick Frierson, Whitman College A Step Towards Smithian Environmental Ethics (frierspr@whitman.edu) Discussant: Glenn Hueckel, Pomona College (glenn_hueckel@pomona.edu) Session II-C-6: Consumption, Liberty and Justice (YS-III)Room: Wyatt 301 Chair: Sandra Peart, Baldwin-Wallace College (speart@bw.edu) 1. Alexander Bick A Pattern to Others: Bernard Mandeville and the Economy of the Dutch (abbick@hotmail.com) Discussant: Margaret Schabas, University of British Columbia (schabas@interchange.ubc.ca) 2. Tiziana Foresti, University of Pisa Thorstein B. Veblen in Italy in the First Half of the Twentieth Century: Hysteriographical Perspectives (ti.foresti@katamail.com) Discussant: Dell Champlin, Eastern Illinois University (cfdpc1@ux1.cts.eiu.edu) 3. Huei-Chun Su, University of Exeter Distributive Justice and Liberty: A New Perspective on John Stuart Mill’s Utilitarianism

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(h.su@ex.ac.uk) Discussant: Sandra Peart, Baldwin-Wallace College (speart@bw.edu) 4. Susana Martinez-Rodriguez, University of Santago, Spain The Ideas of Spanish Economists in the Second Half of the 19th Century on Position of Women in the Economy (susanamr@usc.es) Discussant: Sandra Peart, Baldwin-Wallace College (speart@bw.edu)

Presidential Address 5:15 PM-6:15 PM

Mary Morgan, London School of Economics TBA Concert Hall

Reception 6:30 PM-7:45 PM

(Wheelock Student Center)

HES Banquet

7:45 PM-9:45 PM (Wheelock Rotunda)

(Ticket Required)

Monday June 27, 2005Sessions III-A: 8:30 AM-10:00 AM

Session III-A-1: Rights and Radical Economics Room: Wyatt 313 Chair: Mathew Forstater, University of Missouri – Kansas City (ForstaterM@umkc.edu)

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1. Tiago Mata, London School of Economics Economics for the People: Outreach Activities of URPE and Radical Identity: 1972-78 (t.j.mata@lse.ac.uk) Discussant: Sasan Fayazmanesh, California State University - Fresno (sasanf@csufresno.edu) 2. Mathew Forstater, University of Missouri – Kansas City From Civil Rights to Economic Rights: Bayard Rustin and Full Employment (ForstaterM@umkc.edu) Discussant: Robert Dimand, Brock University (dimand@brocku.ca) Session III-A-2: Roundtable on Economics and Intellectual ImperialismRoom: Wyatt 307 Moderator: Uskali Mäki, Erasmus University - Rotterdam (umaki@fwb.eur.nl) 1. Caterina Marchionni and Uskali Mäki, Erasmus University - Rotterdam Is Geographical Economics a Form of Economics Imperialism? (umaki@fwb.eur.nl)(marchionni@fwb.eur.nl) 2. Jaakko Kuorikoski and Aki Lehtinen, University of Helsinki Shades of Rationality: The Role of Intentionality in the Economic Unification of the Social Sciences (jaakko.kuorikoski@helsinki.fi)(aki.lehtinen@helsinki.fi) 3. Uskali Mäki, Erasmus University - Rotterdam Progress by Conquest? Economics Imperialism and Scientific Advancement (maki@fwb.eur.nl) Session III-A-3: Economics and National Statecraft Room: Wyatt 101 Chair: Stephen Meardon, Bowdoin College (smeardon@bowdoin.edu) 1. Evert Schoorl & Henk W. Plasmeijer, Groningen University Economics and Statecraft Between Old and New Statistics – Ackersdijck’s Course of Lectures in 1826

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(e.schoorl@eco.rug.nl)(h.w.plasmeijer@eco.rug.nl) Discussant: Robert P. Rogers, Ashland University (rrogers1@ashland.edu) 2. Aiko Ikeo, Waseda University Japanese Economists and International Trade Friction: Turning Point of 1985 (aikoikeo@waseda.jp) Discussant: Robert P. Rogers, Ashland University (rrogers1@ashland.edu) Session III-A-4: Topics in Early Neoclassical Theory Room: Wyatt 109 Chair: Torsten Schmidt, University of New Hampshire (torsten.schmidt@unh.edu) 1. Manuela Mosca, University of Lecce Competition and Monopoly in Pareto and Barone (mosca@spbo.unibo.it) Discussant: S. Abu Turab Rizvi, University of Vermont (abu.rizvi@uvm.edu) 2. Torsten Schmidt, University of New Hampshire Auspitz and Lieben and the Composite Commodity Theorem (torsten.schmidt@unh.edu) Discussant: S. Abu Turab Rizvi, University of Vermont (abu.rizvi@uvm.edu)

Monday June 27, 2005Sessions III-B: 10:30 AM-12:00 Noon

Session III-B-1: Nineteenth Century American Economic Thought Room: Wyatt 313 Chair: Robert P. Rogers, Ashland University (rrogers1@ashland.edu)

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1. Stephen Meardon, Bowdoin College Liberal Versus Imperial Utopia and a Paradox of American Trade Policies (smeardon@bowdoin.edu) Discussant: Tim Leonard, Princeton University (tleonard@princeton.edu) 2. Laurence Moss, Babson College Origins and Uses of the Henry George Theorem (lmos@aol.com) Discussant: Warren Samuels, Michigan State University (warrensamuels@bigplanet.com) 3. Tim Leonard, Princeton University Competition and Progress in the Progressive Era (tleonard@princeton.edu) Discussant: Bradley Bateman, Grinnell College (bateman@grinnell.edu) Session III-B-2: Market Failure and Transactions Cost Room: Wyatt 101 Chair: Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham (R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk) 1. Lowell Jacobsen, Baker University Austin Robinson's Influence on Coase and “The Nature of the Firm” (LJacobsen@bakeru.edu) Discussant: Steve Medema, University of Colorado at Denver (smedema@carbon.cudenver.edu) 2. Huascar Pessali (University of Hertfordshire) and Ramon Fernandez (FGV-SP) Negotiating Transactions Cost Economics: Oliver Williamson and His Audiences (pessali@btinternet.com) Discussant: Uskali Mäki, Erasmus University Rotterdam (Umaki@fwb.eur.nl) 3. Steve Medema, University of Colorado at Denver Mill, Sidgwick, and the Evolution of the Theory of Market Failure (smedema@carbon.cudenver.edu)

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Discussant: Roger Backhouse, University of Birmingham (R.E.Backhouse@bham.ac.uk) Session III-B-3: Rationality, Decisions, and Time Room: Wyatt 109 Chair: Malcolm Rutherford, University of Victoria (rutherfo@uvic.ca) 1. Lawrence Boland, Simon Fraser University Building Economics so that Time Matters (boland@sfu.ca) Discussant: Wolfram Latsch, University of Washington (latsch@u.washington.edu) 2. Stefano Fiori, University of Torino Simon’s Bounded Rationality: Historical and Theoretical Perspectives (stefano.fiori@unito.it) Discussant: Philip Mirowski, University of Notre Dame (pmirowsk@nd.edu) 3. Wolfram Latsch, University of Washington Ranking and Reflection: On Amartya Sen and “Genuine Choice” in Economics (latsch@u.washington.edu) Discussant: Amos Witztum, London Metropolitan University (A.Witztum@londonmet.ac.uk, A. Witztum@lse.ac.uk) Session III-B-4: Roundtable on the Early History of Financial Economics Room: Wyatt 307 Moderator: Geoffrey Poitras, Simon Fraser University (poitras@sfu.ca) 1. Robert Dimand, Brock University Louis Bachelier (dimand@brocku.ca) 2. Franck Jovanovic, University of Orleans and H2S (ENS-Cachan) The 19th Century Science of Financial Investments

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(franck.jovanovic@univ-orleans.fr) 3. Geoffrey Poitras, Simon Fraser University The Writings of Richard Price on Actuarial Science (poitras@sfu.ca)

End of Conference

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