Description

Book Synopsis
In this innovative highly readable contribution to the study of Keynes, Wayne Parsons makes a radical departure from the conventional approaches to Keynesian economies.

As a political scientist Parsons believes that, if we are to grasp the revolutionary nature of Keynes's way of thinking about policy problems, we need to place his theories in a wider intellectual and inter-disciplinary setting. Keynes, he suggests, was a social scientist, philosopher and opinion-former with one foot in the age of science and another in the age of sorcery. Like Newton, about whom Keynes wrote with considerable knowledge and insight, he was a thinker whose method was rooted in an alchemical fascination with the art of transmutation and the quest for the philosophers' stone. Parsons maintains that unless we appreciate this alchemical quality of Keynes's economics we fail to comprehend his particular genius as a philosopher of possibility. The author paints a portrait of a Bloomsbury Faust, a Mephistopheles in Whitehall: an image which is a long way removed from the modernist discourse which has largely framed our reading of his economics. Free from the mechanistic and positivistic language which has come to obscure his work Wayne Parsons concludes that Keynes can once again become a source of inspiration and illumination for the theory and practice of public policy.

Keynes and the Quest for a Moral Science is an accessible, highly readable account which will appeal to scholars and students in the field of economics, history of economics, public policy and history of ideas.



Trade Review
'Keynes and the Quest for a Moral Science will attract both intellectuals who love ideas and public policy proponents who are looking for a coherent and practical schemata. It is very readable, there is a defined theme, and the author has a learned and fertile mind.'

Table of Contents
Contents: Preface and Acknowledgements 1. A Bloomsbury Faust 2. Newton’s Alchemy and Keynes’s Moral Science 3. Auri Sacra Fames: Money, Sex and Religion 4. Squaring the Circle: The General Theory 5. War and the Transmutation of Capitalism 6. Out of the Ashes: Keynes’s Policy Science Index

Keynes and the Quest for a Moral Science: A Study

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    A Paperback / softback by Wayne Parsons

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      View other formats and editions of Keynes and the Quest for a Moral Science: A Study by Wayne Parsons

      Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
      Publication Date: 31/03/2010
      ISBN13: 9781849802918, 978-1849802918
      ISBN10: 1849802912

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In this innovative highly readable contribution to the study of Keynes, Wayne Parsons makes a radical departure from the conventional approaches to Keynesian economies.

      As a political scientist Parsons believes that, if we are to grasp the revolutionary nature of Keynes's way of thinking about policy problems, we need to place his theories in a wider intellectual and inter-disciplinary setting. Keynes, he suggests, was a social scientist, philosopher and opinion-former with one foot in the age of science and another in the age of sorcery. Like Newton, about whom Keynes wrote with considerable knowledge and insight, he was a thinker whose method was rooted in an alchemical fascination with the art of transmutation and the quest for the philosophers' stone. Parsons maintains that unless we appreciate this alchemical quality of Keynes's economics we fail to comprehend his particular genius as a philosopher of possibility. The author paints a portrait of a Bloomsbury Faust, a Mephistopheles in Whitehall: an image which is a long way removed from the modernist discourse which has largely framed our reading of his economics. Free from the mechanistic and positivistic language which has come to obscure his work Wayne Parsons concludes that Keynes can once again become a source of inspiration and illumination for the theory and practice of public policy.

      Keynes and the Quest for a Moral Science is an accessible, highly readable account which will appeal to scholars and students in the field of economics, history of economics, public policy and history of ideas.



      Trade Review
      'Keynes and the Quest for a Moral Science will attract both intellectuals who love ideas and public policy proponents who are looking for a coherent and practical schemata. It is very readable, there is a defined theme, and the author has a learned and fertile mind.'

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Preface and Acknowledgements 1. A Bloomsbury Faust 2. Newton’s Alchemy and Keynes’s Moral Science 3. Auri Sacra Fames: Money, Sex and Religion 4. Squaring the Circle: The General Theory 5. War and the Transmutation of Capitalism 6. Out of the Ashes: Keynes’s Policy Science Index

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