Why and how humans trade, predict, aggregate, and innovate : an economist's lessons on the role of human behavior and economic systems / Maurizio Bovi.
2022
HF1008
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Details
Title
Why and how humans trade, predict, aggregate, and innovate : an economist's lessons on the role of human behavior and economic systems / Maurizio Bovi.
Author
Bovi, Maurizio, author.
ISBN
9783030938857 (electronic bk.)
3030938859 (electronic bk.)
9783030938840 (print)
3030938840
3030938859 (electronic bk.)
9783030938840 (print)
3030938840
Published
Cham : Springer, 2022.
Copyright
©2022.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (viii, 191 pages) : color illustrations.
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-030-93885-7 doi
Call Number
HF1008
Dewey Decimal Classification
330
Summary
Trading, forecasting, aggregating, and innovating (the Four) are key social interactions in human life at both the individual and aggregate levels. They are part of the human fabric because they stem from mankind's peculiarities--heterogeneity, inclination to forecast, sociality, and inventiveness. But humans have multifaceted behavior, too. They are capable of having contradictory impulses towards one another, integrating and disintegrating as well as cooperating and dominating, and behaving prosocially and anti-socially. Hence, humans need to organize themselves in order to maintain, improve, and extend their social interactions as well as a safe and ordered life. Crucial intersections emerge naturally--the efficiency of humans' way of tackling the Four is a joint product of economic systems, institutions, and behaviors. All told, the main idea of this book is to include in a single tour a collection of insights on why and how humans implement the Four. The narrative highlights several connections as well as how key these businesses are as the traveler is escorted through some Four-related behavioral problems and institutional solutions that humans have been, respectively, facing and elaborating over time. Economics students may exploit this book by both inserting what they are learning from textbooks into a wider framework and enjoying some of the hints revealed by the grand social theorizing of giants such as A. Smith and J. Schumpeter. But the proposed tour may also attract outsiders to economics who are curious about disparate economic themes linked to the Four but who wish to gain an overview without engaging in longer readings.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references.
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users.
Source of Description
Online resource; title from PDF title page (SpringerLink, viewed April 5, 2022).
Series
Contributions to economics, 2197-7178
Available in Other Form
Print version: 9783030938840
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Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Prologue
Chapter 2. Trading: Humans Are Heterogeneous Animals
Chapter 3. Forecasting: Humans Are Prone-To-Predicting Animals
Chapter 4. Aggregating: Humans Are Social Animals
Chapter 5. Innovating: Humans Are Ingenious Animals
Chapter 6. Epilogue.
Chapter 2. Trading: Humans Are Heterogeneous Animals
Chapter 3. Forecasting: Humans Are Prone-To-Predicting Animals
Chapter 4. Aggregating: Humans Are Social Animals
Chapter 5. Innovating: Humans Are Ingenious Animals
Chapter 6. Epilogue.