Moral Science and Moral Order

by
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2001-03-01
Publisher(s): Liberty Fund
List Price: $15.23

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Summary

This volume presents a representative sampling of James M Buchanan's philosophical views as he deals with fundamental problems of moral science and moral order. As one might expect, Buchanan always goes back to fundamental principles first. From there, his observations and conclusions range far and wide from his own discipline. The thirty essays collected in MORAL SCIENCE AND MORAL ORDER are divided into these categories: methods and models; belief and consequence; moral community and moral order; moral science, equality, and justice; contractarian encounters. In his foreword, Hartmut Kliemt says, "The British and Scottish Moralists of the Enlightenment period would have felt very comfortable with James Buchanan. Like them, Buchanan may be seen as a 'man of letters' who concerns himself with fundamental problems of moral science and moral order. But, also like them, Buchanan is not a secondhand dealer in old ideas. On the contrary, taking as inspiration classical philosopher-economists (in particular, Adam Smith), Buchanan not only proposes new applications of the neoclassical economic paradigm, he also addresses, in innovative ways, fundamental issues of his discipline and beyond." Kliemt's lengthy foreword highlights some of the major philosophical currents with which Buchanan is engaged in the papers collected in this volume. His introduction to these philosophies provides an excellent grounding for economists and all readers who may not be familiar with the philosophical and fundamental issues Buchanan undertakes.

Table of Contents

Foreword xi
Methods and Models
Economics and Its Scientific Neighbors
3(21)
The Domain of Subjective Economics: Between Predictive Science and Moral Philosophy
24(16)
The Related but Distinct ``Sciences'' of Economics and of Political Economy
40(15)
Rational Choice Models in the Social Sciences
55(16)
An Ambiguity in Sen's Alleged Proof of the Impossibility of a Pareto Libertarian
71(9)
Choosing What to Choose
80(16)
Law and the Invisible Hand
96(14)
On Some Fundamental Issues in Political Economy: An Exchange of Correspondence
110(32)
James M. Buchanan
Warren J. Samuels
Economic Analogues to the Generalization Argument
142(4)
James M. Buchanan
Gordon Tullock)
Monetary Research, Monetary Rules, and Monetary Regimes
146(7)
Belief and Consequence
The Potential for Tyranny in Politics as Science
153(18)
Belief, Choice and Consequences: Reflections on Economics, Science and Religion
171(16)
Moral Community and Moral Order
Moral Community, Moral Order, or Moral Anarchy
187(15)
Moral Community and Moral Order: The Intensive and Extensive Limits of Interaction
202(9)
A Two-Country Parable
211(4)
Economic Origins of Ethical Constraints
215(20)
Moral Science, Equality, and Justice
Political Economy and Social Philosophy
235(16)
An Individualistic Theory of Political Process
251(15)
Constitutional Democracy, Individual Liberty, and Political Equality
266(15)
Equality as Fact and Norm
281(16)
Political Equality and Private Property: The Distributional Paradox
297(14)
Fairness, Hope, and Justice
311(42)
Contractarian Encounters
Rawls on Justice as Fairness
353(7)
A Hobbesian Interpretation of the Rawlsian Difference Principle
360(19)
The Matrix of Contractarian Justice
379(24)
James M. Buchanan
Loren E. Lomasky)
Notes on Justice in Contract
403(12)
The Libertarian Legitimacy of the State
415(14)
Utopia, the Minimal State, and Entitlement
429(8)
The Gauthier Enterprise
437(22)
Constructivism, Cognition, and Value
459(10)
Name Index 469(4)
Subject Index 473

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