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Mighty Microeconomics
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 454

Mighty Microeconomics

Economics helps us to understand that certain slick mechanisms are operating beyond what we see in our daily economic lives. To fully understand and appreciate these mechanisms, we need to master the core mathematical theories, some of which are highly advanced and typically covered in a graduate course. This textbook presents those theories without compromising rigor, but, at the same time, the author offers a number of innovative pedagogical twists that make the difficult materials completely accessible to undergraduate students, and even to general readers. Written in a chatty, colloquial style, the author explains basic messages and core insights that are usually hidden between the lines. The usefulness of these theories is shown through a number of real-life examples, and, in the end, the readers can see that the mathematical models provide deep insights into social justice and philosophy. This book helps readers to think like an economist.

Rational Commitment and Social Justice
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 263

Rational Commitment and Social Justice

Essays concerned with fundamental issues of rational commitment and social justice to which Kavka devoted his work as a philosopher.

Committing to a Mechanism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 54

Committing to a Mechanism

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1992
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Switching Costs, Sectoral Adjustments and the Welfare-relevance of Pecuniary Externalities
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 56
Spontaneous Order
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 401

Spontaneous Order

Spontaneous Order brings together Peyton Young's research on evolutionary game theory and its diverse applications across a wide range of academic disciplines, including economics, sociology, philosophy, biology, computer science, and engineering. Enhanced with an introductory essay and commentaries, the book pulls together the author's work thematically to provide a valuable resource for scholars of economic theory. Young argues that equilibrium behaviors often coalesce from the interactions and experiences of many dispersed individuals acting with fragmentary knowledge of the world, rather than (as is often assumed in economics) from the actions of fully rational agents with commonly held beliefs. The author presents a unified and rigorous account of how such 'bottom-up' evolutionary processes work, using recent advances in stochastic dynamical systems theory. This analytical framework illuminates how social norms and institutions evolve, how social and technical innovations spread in society, and how these processes depend on adaptive learning behavior by human subjects.

Mini-symposium on the
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 110
Economy and Disability
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 233

Economy and Disability

Society has developed so that it accommodates the needs of intertwined people, but a question arises as to which people have been accommodated. Has everyone been taken care of in an equal manner? If not, who has fallen into the gap between the institutions that are supposed to accommodate them? This book is a study of these issues of economy and disability using game theory, which has provided a means of analyzing various social phenomena. Part I provides actual cases related to economy and disability, with the stories based on interviews by the author. Part II is geared toward a game theoretic analysis. This book explains disability-related issues by game theory and innovates that theory by...

Economic Theories in a Non-Walrasian Tradition
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 230

Economic Theories in a Non-Walrasian Tradition

Negishi examines a broad range of topics in the history of economics that have relevance to current economic theories. The author contends that one of the tasks for historians of economics is to analyze and interpret theories currently outside the mainstream of economic theory, in this case, Walrasian economics. Familiar topics covered include the division of labor, economies of scale, wages, profit, international trade, market mechanisms, and money. These are considered in reference to the well-known non-Walrasian schools of thought.

The Economic Structure of International Law
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 369

The Economic Structure of International Law

  • Categories: Law

This book presents policymakers and scholars with an over-arching analytical model of international law, one that demonstrates the potential of international law, but also explains how policymakers should choose among different international legal structures.

SuperCooperators
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 354

SuperCooperators

Looks at the importance of cooperation in human beings and in nature, arguing that this social tool is as important an aspect of evolution as mutation and natural selection.