
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In my essay recently published by the Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) I outlined a strategy by which people imagine they’re doing economics, by sounding like an economist with all their talk of trade-offs. But they’re really engaged in a kind of pretend thinking. I call it ‘theorisation’ by analogy with ‘strategisation’ — a term I coined a while back to refer to those portentous ways in which some worthy words are launched upon the world with bold protestations of how they are uniquely suited to current circumstances. We are assured that this thing that’s being said (say the need for wage restraint, or more competition) has ‘never been more important when in fact it’s often been more important. They’re just thoughtful sounding words, but embodying the opposite of thought.
Anyway, this led to my writing up these ideas as idols of the modern mind and to this discussion with Peyton. If you’d like to read the essay, drop me a line on ngruen at gmail I’ll send you access to the full draft essay.
By Nicholas GruenIn my essay recently published by the Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) I outlined a strategy by which people imagine they’re doing economics, by sounding like an economist with all their talk of trade-offs. But they’re really engaged in a kind of pretend thinking. I call it ‘theorisation’ by analogy with ‘strategisation’ — a term I coined a while back to refer to those portentous ways in which some worthy words are launched upon the world with bold protestations of how they are uniquely suited to current circumstances. We are assured that this thing that’s being said (say the need for wage restraint, or more competition) has ‘never been more important when in fact it’s often been more important. They’re just thoughtful sounding words, but embodying the opposite of thought.
Anyway, this led to my writing up these ideas as idols of the modern mind and to this discussion with Peyton. If you’d like to read the essay, drop me a line on ngruen at gmail I’ll send you access to the full draft essay.

2,451 Listeners

118 Listeners

84 Listeners

123 Listeners

3,940 Listeners

304 Listeners

1,640 Listeners

522 Listeners

5 Listeners

1,070 Listeners

316 Listeners

1 Listeners

18 Listeners

4 Listeners

9 Listeners