Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Part I The Natural and the Social
- Part II Physical metaphors and mathematical formalization
- Part III Uneasy boundaries between man and machine
- Part IV Organic metaphors and their stimuli
- 10 Fire, motion, and productivity: the proto-energetics of nature and economy in François Quesnay
- 11 Organism as a metaphor in German economic thought
- 12 The greyhound and the mastiff: Darwinian themes in Mill and Marshall
- 13 Organization and the division of labor: biological metaphors at work in Alfred Marshall's Principles of Economics
- 14 The role of biological analogies in the theory of the firm
- 15 Does evolutionary theory give comfort or inspiration to economics?
- 16 Hayek, evolution, and spontaneous order
- Part V Negotiating over Nature
- Index
10 - Fire, motion, and productivity: the proto-energetics of nature and economy in François Quesnay
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Part I The Natural and the Social
- Part II Physical metaphors and mathematical formalization
- Part III Uneasy boundaries between man and machine
- Part IV Organic metaphors and their stimuli
- 10 Fire, motion, and productivity: the proto-energetics of nature and economy in François Quesnay
- 11 Organism as a metaphor in German economic thought
- 12 The greyhound and the mastiff: Darwinian themes in Mill and Marshall
- 13 Organization and the division of labor: biological metaphors at work in Alfred Marshall's Principles of Economics
- 14 The role of biological analogies in the theory of the firm
- 15 Does evolutionary theory give comfort or inspiration to economics?
- 16 Hayek, evolution, and spontaneous order
- Part V Negotiating over Nature
- Index
Summary
Chez nous, pour nous, tout est physique, et le moral en dérive.
Quesnay in a marginal note to a text of Mirabeau (Weulersse 1910, 122)Introduction
The history of economic thought since the mid-seventeenth century has been characterized by a succession of models that attempt to ground economic ideas in the methodologies, conceptual structures, and mathematics of the natural sciences. While mechanics and the idea of a self-adjusting economic machine have provided the most well known examples in classical and neoclassical theory, it is less known that physiology played a crucially important role in shaping the early development of the classical model. From Hobbes to Quesnay, the dominant set of metaphors shaping the conceptual structure of the economic theory of production and exchange were drawn from physiology and the comparison of the economy to the living body (and the larger economy of nature).
For early economists whose starting point was production, physiology provided an obvious set of analogies. Nature, like the economy, was produced by the self-activity of living organisms. It depended on the extraction and transformation of nutritive and other materials from the earth, which were circulated and consumed. And it reflected design and organization in its parts and its totality. Conceptually, early economists drew on many related domains: mechanics, matter theory, theories of activity and motion, chemistry, and physiology.
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- Information
- Natural Images in Economic ThoughtMarkets Read in Tooth and Claw, pp. 249 - 288Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994
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