Computability, Complexity and Constructivity in Economic Analysis - Softcover

 
9781405130783: Computability, Complexity and Constructivity in Economic Analysis

Synopsis

This cutting-edge collection of essays develops an economic theory based on the mathematics of the digital computer.

  • A cutting-edge collection of essays, which develops an economic theory based on the mathematics of the digital computer.
  • Proposes a wholly different mathematical foundation for economic theory and applied economics.
  • The contributors supply explicit formalizations and applications to traditional issues in economic analysis.
  • Each chapter presents new theoretical perspectives and results, and novel conceptual definitions.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

About the Author

K. Vela Velupillai is John E. Cairnes Professor of Economics at the National University of Ireland, Galway, and holds a ‘Chiara Fama Professorship’ at the University of Trento in Italy. He is also a Senior Visiting Professor at the Madras School of Economics, Chennai, India. His previous books include Computable Economics (2000).

From the Back Cover

This cutting-edge collection of essays develops an economic theory based on the mathematics of the digital computer. It proposes a wholly different mathematical foundation for economic theory and applied economics, providing explicit formalizations and applications to traditional issues in economic analysis. Thus, problems of learning, inference, growth, production theory, financial markets, emergent market forms, computational complexity and stochastic complexity are studied with recursion theoretic, constructive and dynamical systems theoretical tools. Moreover, purely theoretical issues of computability, constructivity and universal computation are broached in clear and instructive ways. The collection is ideally suited for graduate courses on economic theory, macroeconomic and microeconomic theory and mathematical economics.

From the Inside Flap

This cutting-edge collection of essays develops an economic theory based on the mathematics of the digital computer. It proposes a wholly different mathematical foundation for economic theory and applied economics, providing explicit formalizations and applications to traditional issues in economic analysis. Thus, problems of learning, inference, growth, production theory, financial markets, emergent market forms, computational complexity and stochastic complexity are studied with recursion theoretic, constructive and dynamical systems theoretical tools. Moreover, purely theoretical issues of computability, constructivity and universal computation are broached in clear and instructive ways. The collection is ideally suited for graduate courses on economic theory, macroeconomic and microeconomic theory and mathematical economics.

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.