{"id":4805,"date":"2011-05-21T00:34:52","date_gmt":"2011-05-21T08:34:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.oeconomist.com\/blogs\/daniel\/?page_id=4805"},"modified":"2021-05-03T19:04:44","modified_gmt":"2021-05-04T02:04:44","slug":"ixerei","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.oeconomist.com\/blogs\/daniel\/?page_id=4805","title":{"rendered":"<span style=\"font-style: italic ;\">Ixerei<\/span>"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href=\"?p=4705\">A previous entry<\/a> quotes a foot-note from <cite>Austrian Marginalism and Mathematical Economics<\/cite> by Karl Menger; that foot-note is tied to a sentence that I found particularly striking.<\/p> <p>Menger has already explained that there is nothing intrinsically more <em>rigorous<\/em> about reasoning with formal symbols that now characterize most discussions of mathematical subjects as such than reasoning <em>verbally<\/em> (though he also cites Irving Fisher's helpful analogy between taking a train for a trans-continental trip, as opposed to walking the distance).  And he further argues that the Austrian School marginalism was more general in conception than was that of the overtly mathematical marginalists of the late Nineteenth and early Twentieth Century.  None-the-less, he raises a question of why the early Austrian School economists didn't master the calculus. (At the least, it would have allowed them to better follow the work of the other marginalists.)<\/p> <p>Menger's explanation is that texts on the differential calculus were (and in 1971, when the essay was first presented, generally continued to be) written in a manner that used terms ambiguously and equivocally, so that learning typically relied upon inter-action with an instructor, including working through examples with that instructor. (Menger compares this process with how children learn language, as opposed to how languages are learned by adults using grammars and lexica.) In the absence of an instructor, the exposition would tend to frustrate, rather than to enlighten, a careful thinker.<\/p> <p>The sentence that really struck me, though, did so by way of an <em>incidental<\/em> reference.<\/p> <blockquote>While a logical and analytic mind is perfectly sufficient for the self-study of any of the numerous good books on the theory of real functions or on <u>abstract algebra<\/u> (fields <u>as yet of little use for economics<\/u>) such a disposition hinders more than helps a mature man, with limited time at his disposal, in a self-study of calculus.<span style=\"vertical-align: top ; font-size: smaller ;\">14<\/span><\/blockquote> <p>(Underscores mine.)<\/p> <p>Since my readers come from various backgrounds, let me indicate the nature of abstract algebra.  The <span style=\"font-style: italic ;\">algebra<\/span> to which one is <em>first<\/em> introduced &mdash; the <em>only<\/em> algebra to which most people are <em>ever<\/em> introduced if they are introduced to any at all &mdash; is a matter of going from the arithmetic of <em>identified<\/em> numbers to that of variable numbers.  It is, then, in an important sense, already <em>abstract<\/em>.  However, it's really just a particular case of a more general class of structures.  For example, there's the <span style=\"font-style: italic ;\">Boolean<\/span> algebra, with the operations of negation, disjunction, and conjunction.  Its variables can take one of two values (<code>true<\/code> or <code>false<\/code>), and the result of any operation is always one of these two values.  Within this set of values, there is an identity element for the operation of disjunction (<code>false<\/code>) and an identity element for conjunction  (<code>true<\/code>), much as addition and multiplication have identity elements (0 and 1, respectively) in arithmetic algebra.  The operations have properties of associativity, commutativity, and distributivity.  Boolean algebra is not <em>just<\/em> like arithmetic algebra, but there are enough similarities to see these two are variations on some more general theme.  When a mathematician refers to <q>abstract<\/q> algebra, she's referring to the generalized study of such themes.<\/p> <p>(Sometimes, a mathematician will in fact just use the bald word <q>algebra<\/q> for this scope.  While a book entitled <q><u>College<\/u> Algebra<\/q> is likely to have nothing but math that one <em>ought<\/em> to have learned in-or-before high school, a college text entitled just <q>Algebra<\/q> may be something rather more challenging.  However, with an article <q>a&#91;n&#93;<\/q> or <q>the<\/q>, <q>algebra<\/q> will refer to a structure in a narrower class of systems.  An algebra<en>ic system may have no more than some set with a single operation, but <em>an<\/em> algebra must have significantly more.)<\/en><\/p> <p>Traditionally, <q>mathematics<\/q> was defined as the concern with <span style=\"font-style: italic ;\">quantity<\/span> as such, in which case mathematics really always is about arithmetic.  But, especially as attempts were made to place mathematics on a firm foundation, the relationship of mathematics to <em>deeper<\/em> things, especially to <em>logic<\/em> and to <em>order<\/em>, began to be re&auml;ssessed, and the scope of mathematics came to include formal structure more generally.<\/p> <p>Mainstream economics entails a lot of overt mathematics, but this mathematics is primarily that of the calculus.  Other sorts of mathematics may be used, but there is typically an attempt to introduce a sufficient set of assumptions to allow the calculus to be employed in place of those mathematics, as when preferences are proxied by differentiable utility functions.  And even when the calculus is avoided, the mathematics used is that of <em>arithmetic<\/em> &mdash; abstracted beyond specific numbers perhaps, but still a matter of <em>addition<\/em> and of its derivative operations (subtraction, multiplication, &amp;c).<\/p> <p>Mainstream economists imagine themselves themselves not only as more rigorous but also as more <em>scientific<\/em> than <q>non-mathematical<\/q> economists, who rely upon verbal reasoning.  However, although the physical sciences use a considerable amount of overt mathematics, <em>science<\/em> itself is not about using <em>mathematics as such<\/em>; to use mathematics because one sees the physical scientists doing so, and to use a <em>sort<\/em> of mathematics because that is what one has seen them use, is to behave like a <em>cargo cult<\/em>, expecting desired results will follow from uncomprehending mimickry of <em>surface forms<\/em>.  And, although the <q>non-mathematical<\/q> economists are relying upon <em>verbal reasoning<\/em>, they are doing so where <em>logic as such<\/em> is to be brought into play; which, as it turns-out, is true of the mainstream economists as well.  One doesn't much see mainstream economists employing symbolic logic; and, when they do, they often do so sloppily; because they're really just substituting single-characters for words, which words they don't quite understand. (I once saw an economics professor complete an ostensible proof with the line <q>&#8658;&nbsp;&#8707;<var>x<\/var><\/q>.) Meanwhile, as Menger noted, it is also quite possible to be every bit as careful with words as one is with mathematical symbols.<\/p> <p>Some of the <q>non-mathematical<\/q> economists have no particular objection to the overt use of mathematics; it's just not what they do.  Others feel that formal mathematics more often obscures than clarifies.  Some, especially the more faithful followers of Ludwig Heinrich Edler von Mises, insist that mathematics is actively inapplicable except in very limited circumstances.  I have no argument with the first group, and perhaps none with the second. (Even economists who think that the effects of formal mathematics are generally salutary will often agree that too many alleged economists are too often truly <em>lost<\/em> in formul&aelig; decoupled from economic re&auml;lity.) But when I attend to the claims of the third I find that they seem always to equate <em>mathematics<\/em> with <em>arithmetic<\/em> and with that which follows upon it.<\/p> <p>In the case of v. Mises himself, he dated to an era when the definition of <q>mathematics<\/q> in terms of <span style=\"font-style: italic ;\">quantity<\/span> would have been almost universal (though the aforementioned re&auml;ssessment began before his birth) and when few mathematicians would have been doing much of any sort of overt mathematics except such stuff.  Later anti-mathematical economists have less of an excuse, though it certainly hasn't helped that their mainstream opponents often have no better real grasp of the scope of mathematics, nor of the possibilities of formal structures.  But a point to take away here is that these anti-<q>mathematical<\/q> economists are, for the most part, really somewhat confused anti-<em>arithmetical<\/em> economists.  That these radically non-mathematical economists misunderstand the <em>basic<\/em> nature of mathematics might initially have seem utterly fatal to their case, but their mistake is one of confusing a part with the whole.  If one wished to salvage their case, a first step would be to recast it as an attack on the part and not on the whole.  If they've made any case against the use in economics of mathematics more generally, it's just the practical claim that formal mathematics more often obscures than clarifies.<\/p> <p>While there are doubtless a few howling loons who call themselves <q>economists<\/q> and propose to disregard logic, it is happily embraced (or at least courted) by the vast majority of the anti-arithmetical economists.  Well, the <em>form<\/em> of logic (or at least of logic as most of us understand it) is captured by an algebra, the Boolean algebra mentioned above.  Further, they attempt to reason in terms of order without quantification; again, the <em>forms<\/em> of orderings (complete or incomplete) and of the processes for manipulating orderings fall within the scope of abstract algebra.  If one were to practice <em>both<\/em> an overtly <em>mathematical<\/em> economics <em>and<\/em> yet an anti-<em>arithmetical<\/em> economics, the work would be one of <em>abstract algebra<\/em>.<\/p> <p>In fact, one way or another, it's largely in terms of abstract algebra that the disagreement between mainstream and anti-arithmetic economists would be clearly and definitively resolved.  If the present approach of mainstream economists is as general as they assert it to be, then a <em>proof<\/em> for that generality could be presented in terms of abstract algebra.  And if it is as wrong-headed as the anti-arithmetical economists assert it to be, then a <em>proof<\/em> of the wrong-headedness could be presented in terms of abstract algebra.<\/p> <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/05\/origin_1.jpg\" alt=\"[image from the origin story of the Batman, with Bruce Wayne now saying 'Mainstream eocnomists are a superstitious cowardly lot. My guise must be able to strike terror into their hearts.  I must be a creature of the night, black, terrible .. a .. a ..']\" width=\"450\" height=\"614\" style=\"border: 0 ; display: block ; margin-top: 1em ; margin-bottom: 1em ; margin-left: auto ; margin-right: auto ; max-width: 100% ; max-height: 137vw ;\" \/> <p>But, forty years after Menger's parenthetical remark, there's still just not much explicit use being put to abstract algebra.  It appears here-and-there, but almost always only until the author has, again, introduced enough assumptions to start employing arithmetical algebra and all that; often the gain is not in <em>tractabil<\/em>ity but only in <em>familiar<\/em>ity.<\/p> <p>But when I was exposed to the possibility of applying to economics a mode of reasoning that was overtly mathematical yet did not presume any sort of quantification, my thought was to achieve greater <em>generality<\/em> by pushing ahead without those assumptions.<\/p> <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/05\/origin_2.jpg\"\" alt=\"[image from the origin story of the Batman, with now an algebra book (rather than a bat) flying in the window]\" width=\"450\" height=\"604\" style=\"border: 0 ; display: block ; margin-top: 1em ; margin-bottom: 1em ; margin-left: auto ; margin-right: auto ; max-width: 100% ; max-height: 135vw ;\" \/> <p>For good or for ill, the sorts of mathematics that I've been explicitly applying to economics and plan to continue to apply are primarily algebras other than that of arithmetic.  <a href=\"http:\/\/www.praxiologic.com\/economics\/papers\/CoinFlip.pdf\">My paper on incomplete preferences<\/a> is relatively heavy on set algebra and on Boolean algebra, and relatively light on arithmetical algebra, the last playing a r&ocirc;le only amongst the probabilities describing lotteries.  And the paper upon which I'm presently working discards quantification (and even completeness of order) of the <em>plausibilities<\/em> associated with outcomes, so that the arithmetic remaining in the earlier model is abandoned. (The earlier model was just to prove a specific point &mdash; that indecision could operationalize differently from indifference, and thus that it would make sense to invest in construction of models of incomplete preferences.)<\/p> <p>Where I find myself at present can be viewed as a <span style=\"font-style: italic ;\">frontier<\/span> or as a <span style=\"font-style: italic ;\">wilderness<\/span>.  Indeed, <a href=\"?p=4658\">the apparent problem had by <cite>Theory and Decision<\/cite> in finding a reviewer for the paper on incomplete preferences<\/a> was almost certainly an artefact of <a href=\"http:\/\/www.praxiologic.com\/economics\/papers\/CoinFlip.pdf\">that paper<\/a> being unquestionably <em>very<\/em> mathematical, but employing a <em>sort<\/em> of mathematics with which most economists are distinctly uncomfortable. (I would caution against any conclusion that its sort of mathematics is <em>instrinsically<\/em> more <em>difficult<\/em>.)  <\/p> <hr width=\"50%\" align=\"left\" \/><p><span style=\"vertical-align: top ; font-size: smaller ;\">14<\/span> What?  <em>No!<\/em>  Foot-note 14 is quoted in <a href=\"?p=4705\">that previous entry<\/a>!  It's not a foot-note <em>to<\/em> this entry!  Get out of this foot!<\/p> <p style=\"text-align: right ;\"><a href=\"?p=4811#respond\">Comments<\/a><\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"A previous entry quotes a foot-note from Austrian Marginalism and Mathematical Economics by Karl Menger; that foot-note is tied to a sentence that I found particularly striking. Menger has already explained that there is nothing intrinsically more rigorous about reasoning with formal symbols that now characterize most discussions of mathematical subjects as such than reasoning [&hellip;]","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":4809,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","template":"","meta":{"_bbp_topic_count":0,"_bbp_reply_count":0,"_bbp_total_topic_count":0,"_bbp_total_reply_count":0,"_bbp_voice_count":0,"_bbp_anonymous_reply_count":0,"_bbp_topic_count_hidden":0,"_bbp_reply_count_hidden":0,"_bbp_forum_subforum_count":0,"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-4805","page","type-page","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.oeconomist.com\/blogs\/daniel\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/4805","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.oeconomist.com\/blogs\/daniel\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.oeconomist.com\/blogs\/daniel\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.oeconomist.com\/blogs\/daniel\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.oeconomist.com\/blogs\/daniel\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=4805"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/www.oeconomist.com\/blogs\/daniel\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/4805\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":11713,"href":"https:\/\/www.oeconomist.com\/blogs\/daniel\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/4805\/revisions\/11713"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.oeconomist.com\/blogs\/daniel\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/4809"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.oeconomist.com\/blogs\/daniel\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=4805"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}