Articles / Chapters

  1. “Biological Tools and Manufactured Tools as Encapsulated Routines: A Non-Darwinian Approach.” In Yoseph Bar-Cohen (ed.) Biomimetics – Nature-Based Innovation. CRC Press/Francis & Taylor, 2010, forthcoming.
  2. “Introduction: Emotions, Natural Selection, and Rationality.” Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 2010, forthcoming. (Co-authored with Jonathan Wight.)
  3. “The Curious Case of Routines: Between Deliberation and Instinct.” In Mark Dibben (ed.). Applied Process Thought, II. Frankfurt: Ontos Verlag, 2009. (It overlaps with the paper “The Problem of Creativity.”)
  4. “Introduction: A Taste for Every Season.” In Elias L. Khalil (ed.) New Behavioural Economics, 3 vols. A volume of “The International Library of Critical Writings in Economics,” series editor: Mark Blaug. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2009, pp. ix-xxii.
  5. “Action, Entrepreneurship and Evolution.” In Michel Weber and Will Desmond, (eds.), Handbook of Whiteheadian Process Thought, 2 vols. Frankfurt/ Lancaster: Ontos/Verlag, 2008, vol.1, pp. 145-160.
  6. “Introduction: Smith the Hedgehog.” Adam Smith Review, vol. 2, edited by Vivienne Brown. London: Routledge, 2006, pp. 3-20.
  7. “John Dewey, the Transactional View and the Behavioral Sciences: An Introduction.” In Elias L. Khalil (ed.) Dewey, Pragmatism and Economic Methodology. London: Routledge, 2004, pp. 1-12.
  8. “Why does Trustworthiness Pay? Three Answers: An Introduction.” In Elias L. Khalil (ed.) Trust. A volume of “Critical Studies in Economic Institutions,” series editor: Geoffrey M. Hodgson. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2003, pp. xiii-xxxii.
  9. “A Transactional View of Entrepreneurship: A Deweyan Approach.” Journal of Economic Methodology, June 2003, 10:2, pp. 161-179.
  10. “The Context Problematic, Behavioral Economics and the Transactional View: An Introduction to `John Dewey and Economic Theory’.” Journal of Economic Methodology, June 2003, 10:2, pp. 107-130. (Guest editor of a symposium)
  11. “Social Theory and Naturalism: An Introduction.” In Elias L. Khalil and Kenneth E. Boulding (eds.) Evolution, Order and Complexity. London: Routledge, 1996, pp. 1-39. http://www.netlibrary.com/ebook_info.asp?product_id=69224
  12. “After the Special Nature of the Firm: Beyond the Critics of Orthodox Neoclassical Economics.” In John Groenewegen (ed.) Transaction Cost Economics and Beyond. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1995, ch. 15, pp. 289-307.
  13. “Is Poincaréan Nonlinear Dynamics the Alternative to the Selection Theory of Evolution?” Journal of Social and Evolutionary Systems, November 1993, 16:4, pp. 489-500.
  14. “Neo-classical Economics and Neo-Darwinism: Clearing the Way for Historical Thinking.” In Ron Blackwell, Jaspal Chatha, and Edward J. Nell (eds.) Economics as Worldly Philosophy: Essays in Political and Historical Economics in Honour of Robert L. Heilbroner. London: Macmillan, New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1993, pp. 22-72. (Reprinted in Geoffrey M. Hodgson (ed.) Economics and Biology. A volume of “The International Library of Critical Writings in Economics,” series editor: Mark Blaug. Aldershot, UK: Edward Elgar, 1995.)
  15. “Economics and Biology: Eight Areas of Research.” Methodus, December 1992, 4:2, pp. 29-45. (Reprinted in Geoffrey M. Hodgson (ed.) Economics and Biology. A volume of “The International Library of Critical Writings in Economics,” series editor: Mark Blaug. Aldershot, UK: Edward Elgar, 1995.) (The article was the focus of a symposium published in Methodus, June 1993.)
  16. “Fox, Hedgehog, and Owl: Three Temperaments of Economic Discourse.” Methodus, June 1992, 4:1, pp. 101-109.
  17. “Was Marx a Political Economist (or Just an Economist)? Class Power in Relation to the Entry Points of Capital.” Methodus, June 1992, 4:1, pp. 35-43.
  18. “Principles, Rules and Ideology.” Forum for Social Economics, Spring/Fall 1989, 18:2/19:1, pp. 41-54.
  19. “Kuhn, Lakatos, and the History of Economic Thought.” International Journal of Social Economics, August 1987, 14:3-5, pp. 118-131.

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