The Road to Complexity: Why Should Economics Follow Physics
In this contribution we will show that the mainstream of contemporary economics, after its initial development in XIXth century analytical and conceptual framework of classical Physics, is still anchored to its conceptual core, the general equilibrium theory, neglecting the evolution of physics itself towards the treatment of complex systems, and even the nature of its own knowledge object. For that, after a short summary of classical physics formalism and of the own neoclassical economics, we will analyze the evolution of both disciplines throughout the last century, with particular attention being focused on the development of thermodynamics from its original equilibrium formalism until the formalization of the concept of dissipative structures in nonlinear thermodynamics. Finally, we outpoint some lines along which we consider the adaptation of economics to contemporary physics must be done.
Year of publication: |
2012
|
---|---|
Authors: | Varela Cabo, Luis M. ; Ricoy Riego, Carlos J. |
Published in: |
Revista Galega de Economía. - Facultade de Ciencias Económicas e Empresariais. - Vol. 21.2012, 1
|
Publisher: |
Facultade de Ciencias Económicas e Empresariais |
Subject: | Neoclassical economics | Classical physics | Nonlinear thermodynamics | Complex systems | Complexity economics |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
Elsner, Wolfram, (2013)
-
Non-linear dynamics, complexity and randomness : algorithmic foundations
Velupillai, Kumaraswamy, (2011)
-
Emergent complexity in agent-based computational economics
Chen, Shu-Heng, (2011)
- More ...