10 pointsby Anon847 hours ago3 comments
  • OhMeadhbh5 hours ago

       I know this isn't the place to chime in with a conversation
       about economics, but when has that stopped me before?
    
       I read Mokyr's book, A Culture of Growth
       [[ https://search.worldcat.org/title/964805224 ]] a couple years
       ago and enjoyed it.  I had a few nits about the content, but
       then again, I'm not a Nobel Prize winning economist, so maybe I
       should keep my mouth shut about that.  If you're interested in
       either history or economics, you should put it on the list of
       books to consider reading.  If you're interested in both, you
       probably should read it.
    
       But... I can also recommend von Hipple's Innovation series:
       [[ https://evhippel.mit.edu/books/ ]].
    
       And for the beginnings of a contrasting view to the "yeehaa!
       growth!" mindset from the timeframe covered by Mokyr's book, I
       would recommend Schumacher's "Small is Beautiful."
       [[ https://search.worldcat.org/title/1239792692 ]] To be honest,
       except for two chapters, I found the writing a little
       uninspired.  But it's worth a read as it introduces concepts you
       hear from "post industrial" types (thinking of the Slow Food and
       Slow Money movements.)  I have a to-do item to write a book
       about the "Slow Code" movement, but the industry probably
       doesn't need help with that.
    
       I haven't read Aghion's Endogenous Growth Theory
       [[ https://search.worldcat.org/title/1027693933 ]], but worldcat
       tells me it's at my local academic library, so I may have to
       give it a go.
  • OhMeadhbh6 hours ago
    FT chimes in with a bit of context and references at https://www.ft.com/content/f392e6bd-f207-40b6-8b9a-59947d567...
  • nabla96 hours ago
    Flow of HN discussion every time Economics Nobel is announced:

    It's not a "real" Nobel Prize. This is because it's officially the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, created in 1968.

    This distinction often leads to people downplaying economics itself. They argue it's not a "real" science like physics or chemistry because it can't predict things perfectly and is based on human behavior, which is unpredictable. This critique sets the stage for a more political debate. Libertarian and socialist contribution is oversized.