Milton Friedman's Stance: The Methodology of Causal Realism

dc.contributor.author

Hoover, KD

dc.date.accessioned

2010-03-09T15:43:24Z

dc.date.available

2010-03-09T15:43:24Z

dc.date.issued

2004

dc.description.abstract

Milton Friedman is usually regarded as an instrumentalist on the basis of his infamous claim that economic theories are to be judged by their predictions and not by the realism of their assumptions. This interpretation sits oddly with Friedman's empirical work - e.g., Friedman and Schwartz''s monetary history - and his explicit rejection of theories of the business cycle that, while based on accurate correlations, nevertheless do not make economic sense. In this paper, I try to reconcile Friedman's methodological writings with his practices as an empirical economist by, first, taking his roots in Alfred Marshall seriously and, second, by taking the methodological implications of his empirical work seriously. Friedman dislikes the word "cause". Nevertheless, appearances to the contrary notwithstanding, Friedman is best understood as a causal realist - that is, one who understands the object of scientific inquiry as the discovery through empirical investigation of the true causal mechanisms underlying observable phenomena.

dc.format.extent

264323 bytes

dc.format.mimetype

application/pdf

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/2070

dc.language.iso

en_US

dc.publisher

Cambridge University Press

dc.title

Milton Friedman's Stance: The Methodology of Causal Realism

dc.type

Journal article

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
Hoover_milton_freedmans_stance.pdf
Size:
258.13 KB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format