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--- Andrew Brown <Andrew@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi Ajit, > > You wrote: > > > Hume's > > challenge on causation has never been answered. > > I think materialist dialectics does just that. And I > base my > interpretaion of value theory on just this answer. I > am very taken > with your interpretaion of Sraffa but if you really > believe Hume has > never been answered then I don't see how you can > offer a useful > economic theory. > > Best wishes, > > Andy _____________________ Hi, Andy! Because economic theory does not have to be an empiricist philosophy of knowledge. Hume himself did not follow his empiricist philosophy in his other works because his philosophy ultimately leads to nihilism. But that does not mean that the philosophical problem he raised for empiricist knowledge, particularly for the implied relation of cause and effect, is all bunk. It shows us the limitation of what we claim to know. Now, we all know that all sciences are predictive, i.e. built on the relation of cause and effect. But science is not in a business of proving anything--it is neither philosophy nor mathematics. In some Kantian sense science simply takes the relation of cause and effect as a priori or its fundamental belief or axiom. On this basis it only tentatively suggests certain causal explanations for various phenomena. But these theories must always remain tentative and can never prove its correctness beyond doubt. The main role of science is to act as a medicine that sooths our mind by giving some sort of order to desperate phenomena--it keeps us from going crazy! That's an admirable job and economics can be part of it. But it is also good to know the limitations of what we claim to know. Cheers, ajit sinha __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Protect your identity with Yahoo! Mail AddressGuard http://antispam.yahoo.com/whatsnewfree
- Re: indirect labor, the real wage, and the production of surplus value, (continued)
- Re: indirect labor, the real wage, and the production of surplus value, Rakesh Bhandari Fri 14 Nov 2003, 08:50 GMT
- Re: indirect labor, the real wage, and the production of surplus value, ajit sinha Fri 14 Nov 2003, 10:15 GMT
- Hume, Andrew Brown Fri 14 Nov 2003, 15:53 GMT
- Re: Hume, glevy Fri 14 Nov 2003, 17:45 GMT
- Re: Hume, ajit sinha Sat 15 Nov 2003, 05:26 GMT
- Re: Hume, Rakesh Bhandari Sat 15 Nov 2003, 09:36 GMT
- Re: Hume, Andrew Brown Mon 17 Nov 2003, 17:20 GMT
- Re: Hume, ajit sinha Wed 19 Nov 2003, 06:52 GMT
- Re: Hume, Andrew Brown Wed 19 Nov 2003, 11:20 GMT