— Kenneth J. Arrow, Nobel Laureate, Stanford
University
"Homo economicus is dead, but whose homo behavioralis will replace
him? For those who care, this sustained and honest attempt to explore
the implications for economic theory of one of the leading candidates
is essential reading."
— Ken Binmore, University College London
"This is one of the most engaging books of its kind that has been
written, intellectually challenging and a pleasure to read. It
presents an innovative and unconventional perspective on
microeconomics and, as such, is a book that many will want to teach
from—I will."
— Kaushik Basu, Cornell University
"Bowles does a masterful job of expanding the boundaries of received
microeconomic theory by drawing upon cutting edge ideas from
behavioral and experimental economics, evolutionary game theory, and
the new institutional economics. I don't know of anyone who has woven
such a wide range of literature into an equally coherent vision of
post-Walrasian microeconomic theory."
— Gregory Dow, Simon Fraser University
"Not only does Bowles convey the elements of the conventional theory
of capitalist economies [...] he offers a wealth of cutting edge material
as well [...] [His] theory is neat, thought-provoking, and highly
original—as is much else in this most unusual take on
microeconomics."
"There's a new microeconomics on the block, and it's not the
microeconomics you were taught in school. The new microeconomics takes
seriously that many markets and contracts are incomplete, that agents
are differentially informed, that much that is pertinent to their
interactions is not verifiable or admissible in a court of law. [...]
Although Bowles's work helps to set out a research agenda that will
take decades to explore, the book offers many of the necessary tools,
a number of interesting starts, and ample food for thought served up
with rich perspective on the histories of both the ideas and the
substantive questions at issue."
"This book may be a turning point in bringing economics back to its
real political economic roots."
— Ariel Rubenstein, Tel Aviv University and
New York University
"An important and highly original book that shows how an evolutionary
version of microeconomics can be brought to bear on central questions
of economic growth and organization."
— Peyton Young, Johns Hopkins University