Amartya Sen
Edited by Christopher Morris
(Cambridge University Press, 2009)
224 pages
Description
Amartya Sen was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 1998 “for his contributions in welfare economics.” Although his primary academic appointments have been mostly in economics, Sen is also an important and influential social theorist and philosopher. His work on social choice theory is seminal, and his writings on poverty, famine, and development, as well his contributions to moral and political philosophy, are important and influential. Sen’s views about the nature and primacy of liberty also make him a major contemporary liberal thinker. This volume of essays on aspects of Sen’s work is aimed at a broad audience of readers interested in social theory, political philosophy, ethics, public policy, welfare economics, the theory of rational choice, poverty, and development. Written by a team of well-known experts, each chapter provides an overview of Sen’s work in a particular area and a critical assessment of his contributions to the field.
Contents
Introduction - Christopher W. Morris
1. Preference, Choice, and Rationality - Shatakshe Dhongde and Prasanta K. Pattanaik
2. Ethics and Economics - Christopher W. Morris
3. Capability and Agency - David Crocker and Ingrid Robeyns
4. Freedom in the Spirit of Sen - Philip Pettit
5. Social Choice Theory and the Informational Basis Approach - Kevin Roberts
6. Sen on Sufficiency, Priority, and Equality - Peter Vallentyne
7. Famine, Poverty, and Property Rights - Steven Scalet and David Schmidtz
8. Development: A Misconceived Theory Can Kill - Sabina Alkire
Christopher W. Morris is Professor of Philosophy at the Department of Philosophy at University of Maryland. Personal home page here.
Update:
Read Andrew I. Cohen's review of the book here.
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