Coming Soon
Symposium on Humanomics: Moral Sentiments and the Wealth of Nations for the Twenty-First Century
I. Introductory Matter
Theory and Applications: Humanomics as a Challenge and Extension to Existing Economics
MICHAEL THOMAS
Overview of the Themes: Constrained Optimization or Observation: On What Economists Take
as Primary
BART WILSON
II. Theoretical Complementarities
Self-interest is more important than sympathy, a friendly reminder
DANIEL J. D’AMICO
Austrian Roots? Humanomics as Principle of Action
RYAN YONK AND PETER C. EARLE
Abstracting Less, Understanding More: Two Smiths, One Interpretive Turn
JOSHUA AMMONS
III. Theoretical Substitutes
Talking Tuism and Ruminating on Rules
ADAM MARTIN
Humanomics and Rational Irrationality: Why Moral Sentiments May Make Voting Biases Worse
JORDON LOFTHOUSE
IV. Applications: Complementary
The Future of Meaningful Work
VLAD TARKO
The confluence of humanomics and neuroeconomics on economic cooperation
RAVI ROY, MOSTAFA DELDOOST, AND RYAN YONK
Humanomics, Envy, and Social Behavior
AARON WIRT
V. Applications: Cases
The Road to Humanomics
VINCENT CARRETT
A Message to You, Homo-Economicus: 2 Tone and Humanomics
NICHOLAS SNOW
VI. Humanomics and Applied Moral Sentiments
Humanomics, Governance, and Religion: Exploring an Institutional Basis for the Moral
Sentiments
ANTHONY GILL
Philosophical Versus Technical Economics
PAUL MUELLER
Catholic Social Teaching and Comparative Economic Systems: On Free Enterprise and the
Common Good
STEPHEN MILLER
VII. Author’s response
Humanomics and Its Interlocutors: On Making Observation Primary
BART WILSON

