mikemex wrote:
If we were talking about art I would agree with you, but economics is an objective brach of knowledge and it isn't really that "multifaceted".
If we were talking about art I would agree with you, but economics is an objective brach of knowledge and it isn't really that "multifaceted". You see, when there was speculation about Bermuda's Triangle the final and solid proof that there was nothing special there came from the isurance companies who didn't charge any special rate for crossing that zone.
emotions are no subject to economics (it's a memorable quote of Marlon Brando's "Quemada").
1) You seem to assume "objective" is superior to "subjective". I think you would agree or accept that mathematics is often referred to as the most perfect science. Actually, its neither. It's not science and it's not perfect, a fact any mathematician will tell you. Important here is this - mathematics is a subjective discipline. In fact, Mathematics is a close relative to philosophy, not even a cousin of science.
Simply put, science is a laboratory and experimental field. Science seems to have the best tools and logic for studying things, for study of the visible, so to speak. The scientist as a scientist is an authority about sensual experience, about things outside the individual mind and hense OBJECTIVE.
2) Mathematics, theology, & philosophy are related disciplines as they specialize on analysis of the INVISIBLE, or ideas. Now, it is a great error of modern Western man to assume that the subjective is inferior to the objective. The objective refers to things that more than one person can observe in some manner and discuss, apart from himself. For instance, you prick yourself with a pin and feel the pain. That specific pain is SUBJECTIVE. No one else can feel your specific pain, only you can.
Philosophy, Theology and MATHEMATICS deals with observation, study, analysis of IDEAS that have no specific, direct connection with any objective thing or object. Yet, there is objectivity to it. If there is no objective reality or existence to ideas, then no idea could be rationally discussed and debated. For instance, "Justice" like a perfect square has no existence outside the human world of idea.
In nature, you can find no perfect square, triangle, circle, no numbers.
Economics is erroneously referred to as science. It is not. Economics is widely considered the king of the behavior sciences. There is a big problem with this. There are no behavioral sciences. There are disciplines called sociology, psychology, social-psychology, economics but none of them is science. Economics does appear to use some elements of science but they do not add up to making econmics a science. The great economists, by the way, were not economists. They were philosophers, beginning with Adam Smith and extending through David Ricardo, even modern Lugwig von Mises. Look up their bibiliographies and you will find they wrote on a number of philosophical subjects.
Philosopher John Locke made a few huge contributions to so-called "Economics." One was a treatise that makes Karl Marx's notions of labor value of work nonsense BEFORE Marx wrote anything (Engels, Marx's only friend, wrote the books that have Marx on them as the author. Engels used Marx's notes. He was a wealthy busy mill owner who didn't have time to sit for hours doing library research. The few Americans who can read a foreign language should read some of the many articles Karl Marx wrote during his long career as newspaper editor and writer. Marx was a gifted writer. A sample of his writing translated into English is the book "The Communist Manifesto", which contains little if any new ideas. It is great prose and thus the only writing by Marx most American lefties ever read.)
Marx, and the marxists chirp this like baby birds, claimed capitalists do no work. They live off the labor of others. He reaches this weird conclusion by defining work very narrowly. Locke demonstrated and explained years before that capitalists provide very valuable work, work that results in jobs and economic growth. People like Warren Buffet certainly feel like they work 70 hours a week! Marx was strongly biased against people who worked with money, especially money lenders and bankers. Truth is Marx was the very spoiled, overindulged son of a successful lawyer and he was a spend thrift from age 18 onward. He was also a drunk. Marx hated jews (he was very much a Jew himself) because the Jewish money lenders he borrowed money from all the time were so audacious as to expect him to back them back. Marx went through three fortunes and not by letting his friends help themselves to his money box. He had no friends but Frederick Engels and their relationship was very strange indeed.
So-called Economists called Marx an economist. Marx would be surprised to learn he was an economist. His PhD was in philosophy and all of his study and thinking was in the school of neo-Hegelian. In fact, he was a member of the "Young Hegelian" philosophy group. He also constantly told revolutionaries "Let me make this clear. I am no Marxist"
But then the great teacher Prince Siddahartha repeatedly told crowds before he taught "I am not a God. I am not a holy man. I teach no religion" you know this Prince as The Buddha and millions "know" him as a God.
--Bruised