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Exploring the History of Statistical Inference in Economics

An issue of: History of Political Economy

HOP 53:6 cover image

Journal Issue

Pages: 332

Volume 53, Number 6

Published: December 2021

An issue of: History of Political Economy

Academic Editor: Kevin D. Hoover

Special Issue Editors: Jeff E. Biddle, Boumans, Marcel

Contributors to this special supplement explore the history of statistical inference, led by two motivations. One was the belief that John Maynard Keynes’s distinction between the descriptive and the inductive function of statistical research provided a fruitful framework for understanding empirical research practices. The other was an aim to fill a gap in the history of economics by exploring an important part of the story left out of existing histories of empirical analysis in economics—namely “sinful” research practices that did not meet or point towards currently reigning standards of scientific research.

Contributors: Amanar Akhabbar, Jeff Biddle, Marcel Boumans, Paul Burnett, Laetitia Lenel, Harro Maas, Mary S. Morgan, Boris Samuel, Thomas A. Stapleford, Aashish Velkar

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Paper ISBN: 978-1-4780-1735-6 /