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ECON000 Undergraduate

The Worldly Philosophers

一部经典的经济思想史探索之作,记述了从亚当·斯密、卡尔·马克思到约翰·梅纳德·凯恩斯等伟大经济学家的生平与远见,他们塑造了现代世界对财富与社会秩序的理解。

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经济学 哲学
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Lesson

This lesson introduces the concept of the "worldly philosopher," exploring how historical economic theories form an invisible intellectual architecture that shapes our modern reality and social norms. By examining the influence of thinkers like Adam Smith and John Maynard Keynes, students learn to identify how abstract philosophical constructs—rather than objective natural laws—define our current economic systems and political possibilities.

The Economic Revolution explores how the pre-capitalist world functioned through social and moral obligations rather than independent economic laws. It examines the transition from survival based on tradition and command to the emergence of the modern market system, where profit-seeking and price signals dictate economic life.

This lesson explores the transition from Mercantilism, an economic philosophy focused on state-controlled gold accumulation and trade restrictions, to Adam Smith’s vision of consumer-centered prosperity. Students will examine how Smith’s shift toward market-driven well-being challenged the era's rigid, zero-sum view of national wealth.

ECON000: The Gloomy Presentiments of Malthus and Ricardo explores how the intellectual partnership between Thomas Malthus and David Ricardo shifted economic thought from Enlightenment optimism to the somber analysis of the dismal science. Students will examine Malthus’s theory of population growth, which highlights the structural conflict between geometric population expansion and arithmetic limits on food production.

This lesson explores the shift from Adam Smith’s optimism to the "dismal science" of Malthus and Ricardo, highlighting how abstract economic models often ignored the social suffering caused by industrialization. It also contrasts the era's brutal laissez-faire practices with Robert Owen’s New Lanark, which demonstrated that industrial success could be achieved by prioritizing human welfare and environmental conditions.

This lesson explores the influential partnership between Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, highlighting how their collaboration led to the 1848 Communist Manifesto and a shift toward scientific socialism. It further examines Marx’s inversion of Hegelian philosophy, replacing the focus on abstract ideas with a materialist view of history driven by economic forces.

This lesson explores the transition of economics from a field of revolutionary political philosophy to a specialized, technical science focused on mathematical equilibrium. It highlights how empirical evidence of rising living standards challenged Marxist predictions of collapse, leading to the professionalization of the discipline and the adoption of mathematical models to measure human utility.

This lesson explores the Gilded Age as an Era of Brass Knuckles, contrasting the neoclassical theory of rational market equilibrium with the reality of predatory corporate warfare and physical sabotage. It introduces Thorstein Veblen’s perspective, which analyzes these economic power struggles through an anthropological lens to reveal how status-driven prowess and institutional behavior shaped the American industrial landscape.

This lesson explores the ideological shift from Karl Marx’s view of capitalism as a doomed system to John Maynard Keynes’s perspective of it as a salvageable machine requiring technical management. Students will learn how Keynes challenged classical economic theories by proposing that government intervention could repair systemic malfunctions and preserve the existing social order.

This lesson explores Joseph Schumpeter’s critique of the "stationary state," arguing that capitalism is defined not by static equilibrium, but by the dynamic process of creative destruction. Students will learn how entrepreneurs drive economic growth through innovation and "new combinations," which serve as the true source of profit in an otherwise circular economy.

This lesson explores the tension between treating economics as a deterministic physical science and recognizing it as a social science defined by human volition. It argues that because individuals possess the capacity for reflexive choice—as seen in the Veblen Effect—economic behavior cannot be reduced to the predictable, mechanistic laws found in physics.

课程概述

📚 内容摘要

一部探讨经济思想史的经典著作,描绘了那些塑造了现代世界对财富与社会秩序理解的伟大经济学家——从亚当·斯密、卡尔·马克思到约翰·梅纳德·凯恩斯——的生平与远见。

探索那些创造了现代经济世界的思想家们颠覆性的理念与特立独行的人生。

作者: 罗伯特·L·海尔布隆纳

致谢: 谨以此书献给作者的老师们。作者感谢西蒙与舒斯特出版社的约瑟夫·巴恩斯、哈珀出版社的弗雷德里克·刘易斯·艾伦,以及社会研究新学院的阿道夫·洛教授。

🎯 学习目标

  1. 定义“世俗哲学家”,并解释他们的思想如何从异端观点演变为现代常识。
  2. 对比三种社会生存方式:传统(亲属关系/种姓)、命令(权威/鞭策)和市场(利益的诱惑)。
  3. 识别“经济革命”是围绕利益哲学兴起的新愿景的出现。
  4. 区分社会用以防范经济灾难的三种主要方式:传统、命令和市场。
  5. 分析历史上“利润动机”的“发明”以及“经济人”的出现。
  6. 解释“圈地运动”以及土地和劳动力的商品化如何促进了无产阶级和市场体系的兴起。
  7. 分析从重商主义到斯密基于劳动的价值理论和“普遍富裕”的转变。
  8. 解释在实现市场自我调节中,自利与竞争的双重机制。
  9. 评估国家在自由放任框架内的角色,并识别斯密18世纪愿景的历史局限性。
  10. 对比马尔萨斯和李嘉图在经济理论与社会现实方面的思想方法。

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