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The Economic Way of Thinking has reached a milestone. First appearing in 1973, it's now in its tenth edition. This text has enjoyed a steady and dedicated following for the past three decades. It looks different, feels different, and reads different compared with the mainstream fare.
Indeed, this book is different.
This text introduces students to the skills of the economist. It teaches students through example and application. It even teaches by showing students how not to think, by exposing them to the errors implicit in much popular reasoning about economic events. The text is designed primarily for a one-semester survey course in general economics. It has also been successfully used in M'.B.A. economics courses and in Master's courses in economic education. The Economic Way of Thinking develops the basic principles of micro- and macroeconomic analysis, and rigorously employs them as tools rather than as ends unto themselves.
Authors of other introductory texts, understandably eager to display the formal beauty of economic analysis, unwittingly tend to overload students with abstract technical details. One principles text, written by an eminent economist, emphasizes in the first chapter that "economists build models." And, in fact, we all do build models. But the uninitiated college freshman probably won't share our excitement over the models. Most, in fact, sit through our courses merely hoping to get a prerequisite out of the way. Let's show them why they're in the seats and we're at the podium. Let's show them why others who designed the curriculum believe economics is an important area of study. In the end, economics is not about production functions, perfectly competitive equilibria, or Phillips curves. Economics explains the logic of both the economizing process and the exchange process—it is about the everyday world around us. Students using this book will get that message not only at the end of their studies. They'll get it at the very beginning, too.
Paul Heyne never shied away from making his strategy explicit. In previous editions he insisted that "We must show them from the first day how the principles of economics make sense out of buzzing confusion, how they clarify, systematize, and correct the daily assertions of newspapers, political figures, ax grinders, and coffee shop pontificators." For thirty years The Economic Way of Thinking has taught students how to see through the nonsense and begin to understand the complex world around them. The tenth edition continues that tradition.
Accomplishing More With Less
This text accomplishes more—more thinking, more application, more insight—with less emphasis on formal modeling. But don't get us wrong. This is not an easy and watered-down exploration of economics. The tenth edition offers a solid discussion and development of economic principles, and a wealth of probing, illuminating applications to the everyday world around us. Even professional economists have informed the coauthors that they have learned more about economics by reading this book. And that's after they acquired their Ph.D.s.
The book is designed to develop the students' skills in thinking like an economist. If they become hooked, they will have ample opportunity to hone their modeling skills as they advance to other economics course offerings. We hope that the students continue their pursuit of this wonderful discipline—or at least retain its basic lessons.
Changes to the Tenth Edition
The Economic Way of Thinking is Paul Heyne's baby, his pedagogical legacy. It is richly steeped in the property-rights and coordinationist tradition of Alchian and Allen's University Economics, which is long out of print. We believe the success story of The Economic Way of Thinking stems from its accessibility and user-friendly approach. Its style is second to none.
So, when Rod Banister, our editor at Prentice Hall, approached us about coauthoring the tenth edition, both Boettke (pronounced Bet-key) and Prychitko (pronounced Per-chit-ko) were at once honored and hesitant. Prychitko was raised on Alchian and Allen's text and, while still an undergraduate, had tutored his fellow students using Paul's text in the early 1980s. Both Boettke and Prychitko have been teaching their survey courses for the past fifteen years using The Economic Way of Thinking—that's some thirty years of combined experience. We appreciate its style, its wit, its coordinationist themes, its clear focus on property rights, and its emphasis on the dynamic, informational characteristics of markets. But we originally hesitated to accept Rod's kind offer. What if we accidentally drop this sparkling baby into the dirty bathwater? We signed on as coauthors only after we convinced ourselves that we could maintain the text's integrity while making improvements at the margin. Rod already had faith in us. The fact that Paul himself gave us his blessings solidified our commitment. We think he would approve the changes reflected in the tenth edition. He always seemed to be lurking over our shoulders during this revision.
The tenth edition remains true to Paul's clear writing style, wit, and powerful reasoning. We live in exciting—and uncertain—political and economic times. The examples have been updated to reflect many of the new questions and issues that students face today. Previous users will find that some chapters have few alterations while other chapters have been significantly reorganized and rewritten. Many end-of-chapter questions have been either cut or streamlined in the hope that more students will be willing to give the questions an honest try—the task looks less daunting without so many long and probing questions. New questions, of course, have been added. We believe we've improved the flow and logic of the presentation.
We followed our own comparative advantage and divided the labor with Prychitko revising Chapters 1 through 8, Boettke revising chapters 9 through 22, and each of us exchanging, discussing, and reworking our revisions. The final result is a true team effort.
Specific changes to the tenth edition:
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