- Review of Federica Liveriero’s Relational Liberalism: Democratic Co-Authorship in a Pluralistic World. Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature, 2023, xvi + 291 pp.
- Carbon Offsets and Concerns about Shifting Harms: A Reply to Mintz-Woo
- Review of Stephen Engelmann’s Economic Rationality: What is Political Economy? Cambridge, UK: Polity, 2022, 144 pages.
- Review of Thomas Nagel’s Moral Feelings, Moral Reality, and Moral Progress. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2023, v + 70 pp.
- Intergenerational Cooperation and Justice between Age Groups
- What’s so Hard about Hard Choices?
- The Hard Things about Hard Choices? A Reply to Chang
- The Hardness of the Practical Might
- Self-Control and Planning: A Reply to Williamson
- Liberalism’s Difficult Relationship with the Welfare State
- Cybersocialism and the Future of the Socialist Calculation Debate
- Securing obligations: a reply to Hindriks
- Carbon Offsets and Shifting Harms
- Can We Design Spontaneity? Hayek, Design, and the Normative Appeal of Spontaneous Orders
- Carbon Offsets and Concerns About Shifting Harms: A Reply to Elson
- Review of Ingrid Robeyns’ Limitarianism: The Case Against Extreme Wealth, UK: Allen Lane, 2024, xxv + 303 pp.
- Collective Doings in Progress and the Attribution Problem
- The Problem of Collective Harm: A Threshold Solution
- Managing Temptation: Comments on Chrisoula Andreou’s ‘Micromanagement and Poor Self-Control’
- Obituary: Robert Solow and Economic Modeling
- Reflections on the 2023 Nobel Memorial Prize Awarded to Claudia Goldin
- Between Worlds: Daniel Ellsberg (1931–2023)
- Review of Michael Otsuka’s How to Pool Risks Across Generations: The Case for Collective Pensions. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2023, viii + 109 pp.
- Intra/Inter Paradox
- Progressive-Era Racism and Another ‘Blaming the Victim’ Narrative
- The Plurality of Economic Classifications: Toward a New Strategy for Their Investigation
- The Challenge of Choosing Well
- Micromanagement and Poor Self-Control
- What is Owed to the Losers of the Energy Transition? The Case of Fossil Fuel Reserve Owners
- Public Provision in Democratic Societies
- Review of Thomas Kelly’s Bias: A Philosophical Study. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022, x + 288 pp.
- Elements for a Normative Theory of Privatization
- What Public Policy Can Be: An Interview with Matthew Adler
- Review of Thomas Piketty’s A Brief History of Equality. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2022, viii + 288.
- Sharing in Common: A Republican Defence of Group Ownership
- Review of André et al.’s From Evolutionary Biology to Economics and Back: Parallels and Crossings between Economics and Evolution. Cham: Springer, 2022, xi + 186.
- Review of Mark Fabian’s A Theory of Subjective Wellbeing. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2022, x + 305 pp.
- Repoliticizing Privatization
- Defining Exploitation
- Privatization, Structural Dependence, and the Problem of Legitimacy
- Ethics from the Outside Looking In
- Review of Olúf??mi O Táíwò’s Reconsidering Reparations. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022, x + 261 pp.
- The Singular Plurality of Social Goods – Social Ontology and Collective Dilemmas
- The Partially Impartial Spectator
- Review of Josiah Ober’s The Greeks and the Rational: The Discovery of Practical Reason. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2021, xxv + 425 pp
- Anodyne Privatization
- Review of Anna Horodecka’s Human Nature in Modern Economics: Structure, Change and Perspectives. Abingdon and New York, NY: Routledge, 2022, viii + 264 pp.
- Ideologies and Utopia
- Reflections on the 2021 Nobel Memorial Prize Awarded to David Card, Joshua Angrist, and Guido Imbens
- The Injustice of Domination
- Review of Mariusz Maziarz’s The Philosophy of Causality in Economics: Causal Inferences and Policy Proposals. New York: Routledge, 2020, xiv + 208 pp.
- Review of Michael A. Wilkinson’s Authoritarian Liberalism and the Transformation of Modern Europe. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2021, xvi + 335 pp.
- Review of Susumu Egashira, Masanori Taishido, D. Wade Hands, and Uskali Mäki’s (editors) A Genealogy of Self-Interest in Economics. Singapore: Springer, 2021, vi + 325 pp.
- Exploitation and Domination in Application
- What Makes Exploitation Wrongful?
- Review of Robert Skidelsky’s What’s Wrong With Economics?: A Primer for the Perplexed. New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press, 2020, ix + 248 pp.
- A Model-Based and Mechanistic Approach to Social Coordination
- Uncertainty for Uncertain Decision-Makers
- Elucidating the Role of Value Judgments in Normative Economics
- Reflections on the 2022 Nobel Memorial Prize Awarded to Ben Bernanke, Douglas Diamond, and Philip Dybvig
- Gender in the Labor Market
- Review of Conrad Heilmann and Julian Reiss’ (eds.) The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Economics. New York, NY: Routledge, 2022, xvi + 516 pp.
- Jan Tinbergen and the Limits of Expertise
- Review of Jeff E. Biddle’s Progress Through Regression: The Life Story of the Empirical Cobb-Douglas Production Function. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021, xii + 334 pp.
- Economic Modeling in Rawls
- Ambiguity of Superiority and Authority
- Review of Juliana Bidadanure’s Justice Across Ages: Treating Young and Old as Equals. Oxford and New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2021, xi + 238 pp.
- Attitudes First
- Review of Richard Pettigrew’s Dutch Book Arguments. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020, 96 pp.
- Social Engineers Changing the World
- Reading Tinbergen Through the Lens of Max Weber
- Why We Need to Talk About Preferences
- Review of José Luis Bermúdez’s Frame It Again: New Tools for Rational Decision-Making. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020, x + 340 pp.
- Review of Ralph Hertwig, Timothy J. Pleskac, and Thorsten Pachur’s Taming Uncertainty. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2019, xvii + 469 pp.
- Probability and Statistics in the Tinbergen-Keynes Debates
- Jan Tinbergen’s Fallacy
- Methodology and Microfoundations
- Tinbergen on the Theory and Policy of Economic Development
- Can Normative Accounts of Discrimination Be Guided by Anti-discrimination Law? Should They?
- The Making and Unmaking of Ordoliberal Language
- Review of Goldin, Claudia. Career and Family: Women’s Century-Long Journey toward Equity. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2021, xii + 344 pp.
- Measuring Freedom
- The Philosophy and Economics of Measuring Discrimination and Inequality
- Why ‘Indirect Discrimination’ Is a Useful Legal but Not a Useful Moral Concept
- Review of Randall G. Holcombe’s Coordination, Cooperation, and Control: The Evolution of Economic and Political Power. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2020, xii + 328 pp.
- Review of Avia Pasternak’s Responsible Citizens, Irresponsible States: Should Citizens Pay for Their States’ Wrongdoings? New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2021, 248 pp.
- Amartya Sen’s Earlier Conception of Economic Agents through the Origins and Development of his Capability Approach (1970–1993)
- Review of Keith Tribe’s Constructing Economic Science: The Invention of a Discipline 1850–1950. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2022, xiv + 425 pp.
- “The Hardest of All the Problems”
- Three Economic Extensions of John Rawls’s Social Contract Theory
- Review of Joshua L. Cherniss’s Liberalism in Dark Times: The Liberal Ethos in the Twentieth Century. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2021, 305 pp.
- The Case of Stated Preferences and Social Well-Being Indices
- Unfair Inequality
- Issues on the Measurement of Opportunity Inequality
- Desert, Luck, and Justice
- Thresholds and Limits in Theories of Distributive Justice
- Vaccine Refusal Is Still Not Free Riding
- Social Identities
- Narrow Identities Revisited
- Grounding Equal Freedom
- The Different Facets of Injustice
- Review of Till Düppe and Ivan Boldyrev’s (eds.) Economic Knowledge in Socialism, 1945–89. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2019, 321 pp.
- Otto Neurath and Ludwig von Mises
- Choosing Less over More Money
- A Tale Between Finance and Economics
- Social Contract, Extended Goodness, and Moral Disagreement
- Review of Michel S. Zouboulakis’ The Varieties of Economic Rationality: From Adam Smith to Contemporary Behavioural and Evolutionary Economics. New York, NY: Routledge, 2014, 192 pp.
- Group Membership or Identity?
- Deepening and Widening Social Identity Analysis in Economics
- Integrated Moral Agency and the Practical Phenomenon of Moral Diversity
- Can one Both Contribute to and Benefit from Herd Immunity?
- The Paths to Narrow Identities
- Collective Responses to Covid-19 and Climate Change
- Uncertain Policy Decisions During the Covid-19 Pandemic
- No Envy
- Review of Hélène Landemore’s Open Democracy: Reinventing Popular Rule for the Twenty-First Century. Princeton, NJ and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2020, xviii + 243 pp.
- Governing Life and the Economy
- Neighbors Help in a Pandemic
- How to Handle Trade-Offs in Pandemics
- Mathematical Psychology
- Past and Future of Humanomics
- Three Ways in Which Pandemic Models May Perform a Pandemic
- Vaccine Refusal Is Not Free Riding
- Mandated Shutdowns, the Ratchet Effect, and The Barstool Fund
- Pandemic Windfalls and Obligations of Justice
- I Choose for Myself, Therefore I Am
- How Economists Ignored the Spanish Flu Pandemic in 1918–1920
- Review of Massimiliano Vatiero’s The Theory of Transaction in Institutional Economics: A History. New York, NY: Routledge, 2021, 104 pp.
- Galbraith’s Integral Economics (1933–1983)
- Review of Robert B. Talisse’s Overdoing Democracy: Why We Must Put Politics in its Place. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2019, ix + 198 pp.
- Reflections on the 2020 Nobel Memorial Prize Awarded to Paul Milgrom and Robert Wilson
- Review of Valentin Beck, Henning Hahn, and Robert Lepenies’ (eds.) Dimensions of Poverty: Measurement, Epistemic Injustices, Activism. Cham: Springer, 2020, 412 pp.
- Review of Thomas Piketty’s Capital and Ideology. Translated by Arthur Goldhammer. Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2020, 1093 pp.
- What Egalitarianism Requires
- Response to Braham and van Hees, Sher, Vallentyne, and Laslier
- Review of Cheryl Misak’s Frank Ramsey: A Sheer Excess of Powers. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020, 500 pp.
- Review of Janek Wasserman’s The Marginal Revolutionaries: How Austrian Economists Fought the War of Ideas. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2019, 354 pp.
- Review of Alberto Mingardi’s Classical Liberalism and the Industrial Working Class: The Economic Thought of Thomas Hodgskin. New York, NY: Routledge, 2020, 160 pp.
- Normative Aspects of Kantian Equilibrium
- Kantian Kantian Optimization
- Roemer on the Rationality of Cooperation
- Do Kantians Drive Others to Extinction?
- Moral Community and Moral Order
- Reflections on the 2019 Nobel Memorial Prize Awarded to Banerjee, Duflo, and Kremer
- Review of Rutger Claassen’s Capabilities in a Just Society: A Theory of Navigational Agency. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018, 264 pp.
- Dreaming of Unity
- The Community of Advantage
- Review of Anthony B. Atkinson’s Measuring Poverty Around the World. Edited by John Micklewright and Andrea Brandolini. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2019, 429 pp.
- Redefining Universal Development from and at the Margins
- Review of Joost Hengstmengel’s Divine Providence in Early Modern Economic Thought. New York, NY: Routledge, 2019, 248 pp.
- Review of Matthew D. Adler’s Measuring Social Welfare: An Introduction. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2019, 337 pp.
- What About the Society?
- Review of Ola Innset’s Reinventing Liberalism. The Politics, Philosophy and Economics of Early Neoliberalism (1920–1947). Cham: Springer, 2020, 207 pp.
- Review of Ernesto Screpanti’s Labour and Value: Rethinking Marx’s Theory of Exploitation. Cambridge: Open Book Publishers, 2019, 131 pp.
- Measuring Markets and Morality
- Review of Ivan Moscati’s Measuring Utility: From the Marginal Revolution to Behavioral Economics. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2019, 326 pp.
- Markets, Morals, and Virtues: Evidential and Conceptual Issues
- Virtues, Consequences, and the Market
- Markets and Morality: Complements or Substitutes?
- Review of Robert Sugden’s The Community of Advantage: A Behavioural Economist’s Defence of the Market. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019, 352 pp.
- Review of Vernon L. Smith and Bart J. Wilson’s Humanomics: Moral Sentiments and the Wealth of Nations for the Twenty-First Century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019, 215 pp.
- Review of Thomas Mulligan’s Justice and the Meritocratic State. New York, NY: Routledge, 2018, 225 pp.
- Review of Elizabeth Anderson’s Private Government: How Employers Rule Our Lives (and Why We Don’t Talk about It). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2017, 224 pp.
- Review of Rudi Verburg’s Greed, Self-Interest and the Shaping of Economics. San Francisco, CA: Routledge, 2018, 216 pp.
- Entangled Economists
- Reflections on the 2018 Nobel Memorial Prize Awarded to Paul Romer
- Relational History
- A Theory of Joint-Stock Citizenship and its Consequences on the Brain Drain, Sovereignty, and State Responsibility
- U.S. Economics and the Quest for Scientific Authority (1932–1957)
- Agency & Choice
- Understanding with Models
- Reflections on the 2018 Nobel Memorial Prize Awarded to William Nordhaus
- (History of) Economic Knowledge Freed from Determinism
- The Persistence of the Leveling Down Objection
- Review of Kate Raworth’s Doughnut Economics. London: Random House, 2017, 373 pp.
- Review of Tyler Cowen’s Stubborn Attachments. San Francisco: Stripe Press, 2018, 158 pp.
- Review of Peter J. Boettke’s F. A. Hayek: Economics, Political Economy and Social Philosophy. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018, 323 pp.
- On the Practical Impossibility of Being Both Well-Informed and Impartial
- Reason and Political Economy in Hume
- Thinking by Drawing
- Review of John Mizzoni’s Evolution and the Foundations of Ethics. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2017, 272 pp.
- On the Very Idea of a Just Wage (editorial)
- Is the Market Wage the Just Wage?
- Moral Uncertainty Over Policy Evaluation
- The Domain of Desert Principles for Taxation
- Why a Uniform Basic Income Offends Justice
- Do People Deserve their Economic Rents?
- On the Very Idea of an Efficient Wage
- Just Wages, Desert, and Pay-What-You-Want Pricing
- Just Wages in Which Markets?
- The Wage Setting Process
- On the Very Idea of a Just Wage
- Wages, Talents, and Egalitarianism
- Naturalism and Moral Conventionalism
- The Evolutionary Explanation of What?
- Hybrid Vigor
- Review of Herbert Gintis’s Individuality and Entanglement: The Moral and Material Bases of Social Life. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2017, 357 pp.
- Review of Yahya M. Madra’s Late Neoclassical Economics. The Restoration of Theoretical Humanism in Contemporary Economic Theory. New York: Routledge, 218 pp.
- Review of Anna Alexandrova’s A Philosophy For the Science of Well-Being. New York: Oxford University Press, 2017, 196 pp.
- Philosophy With Feet in the Mud
- The Measurement of Wellbeing in Economics
- Review of Kenneth Scheve and David Stasavage’s Taxing the Rich: a History of Fiscal Fairness in the United States and Europe. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2016, 288 pp.
- Review of Alexander Linsbichler’s Was Ludwig von Mises a Conventionalist? A New Analysis of the Epistemology of the Austrian School of Economics. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017, ix + 151 pp.
- Review of Enacting Dismal Science: New Perspectives on the Performativity of Economics, edited by Ivan Boldyrev and Ekaterina Svetlova. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016, vii + 206 pp.
- Review of Erwin Dekker’s The Viennese Students of Civilization: The Meaning and Context of Austrian Economics Reconsidered. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2016, 216 pp.
- Review of Ingmar Persson’s Inclusive Ethics: Extending Beneficence and Egalitarian Justice. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017, 288 pp.
- A Coasian Solution to Problems of Initial Acquisitions
- What Attracted Keynes to Malthus’s High Price of Provisions?
- The Fictitious Liberal Divide
- Reflections on the 2017 Nobel Memorial Prize Awarded to Richard Thaler
- What is required for (r)evolutions? The case of economics
- Polycentric democracy: using and defusing disagreements
- Rational choice theory: its merits and limits in explaining and predicting cultural behavior
- From the Lucasian revolution to DSGE models: an account of recent developments in macroeconomic modelling
- Review of Peter Spiegler’s Behind the model: a constructive critique of economic modelling. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2015. 201pp.
- Economics as a “tooled” discipline: Lawrence R. Klein and the making of macroeconometric modeling, 1939-1959
- Review of Michel de Vroey’s A History of Macroeconomics from Keynes to Lucas and Beyond. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2016, 429 pp.
- Review of Peter Singer’s Ethics in the real world: 82 brief essays on things that matter. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2016, 355 pp.
- Review of Cristina Bicchieri’s Norms in the wild: how to diagnose, measure, and change social norms. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017, xviii + 239 pp.
- Philosophy without borders, naturally: an interview with Harold Kincaid
- The survival of Aristotelianism in early English mercantilism: an illustration from the debate between Malynes and Misselden
- Mainstream economics and the Austrian school: toward reunification
- The counter-revolution of criminological science: a study on the abuse of reasoned punishment
- Fred Feldman’s Distributive justice: getting what we deserve from our country. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016, 288 pp.
- Keynes, Keynesian economics and the political economy of power of the postwar world
- Paul Anand’s Happiness explained. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016, 143 pp.
- Jason Brennan and Peter M. Jaworski’s Markets without limits: moral virtues and commercial interests. New York: Routledge, 2016, 239 pp.
- Reflections on the 2016 Nobel Memorial Prize for contract theory (Oliver Hart and Bengt Holmström)
- Justice, markets, and the family: an interview with Serena Olsaretti
- Hayek’s “Scientism” essay: the social aspects of objectivity and the mind
- Either / Or—why ideas, science, imperialism, and institutions all matter in the “rise of the west”
- Not saving or psychology, or science, but a new liberalism: a reply to Gaus, Goldstone, Baker, Amadae, and Mokyr
- Axiomatic and ecological rationality: choosing costs and benefits
- The bourgeoisie and the scholar
- Dialectical libertarianism: the unintended consequences of both ethics and incentives underlie mutual prosperity
- A place at the table: low wage workers and the bourgeois deal
- The language of Max Weber. A sociological enquiry (in German: Die Sprache Max Webers. Eine soziologische Untersuchung)
- The mismeasure of Capital: a response to McCloskey
- An incrementalist approach to political philosophy. The case of heterogeneous rationality assumptions in theories of distributive justice
- The open society as a rule-based order