prof. dr. M.S. Morgan


  • Faculty of Economics and Business
    Section Macro & International Economics
  • Roetersstraat  11
    1018 WB  Amsterdam
  • M.S.Morgan@uva.nl
    T:  0205254187
    T:  0205254252

2011

  • M.S. Morgan (2011). Seeking parts, looking for wholes. In L. Daston & E. Lunbeck (Eds.), Histories of scientific observation (pp. 303-325). Chicago: University of Chicago.
  • P. Howlett & M.S. Morgan (Eds.). (2011). How well do facts travel? The dissemination of reliable knowledge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • M.S. Morgan (2011). Travelling facts. In P. Howlett & M.S. Morgan (Eds.), How well do facts travel? The dissemination of reliable knowledge (pp. 3-42). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • M.S. Morgan (2011). ‘Voice’ and the facts and observations of experience. In W.J. Gonzáles (Ed.), New methodological perspectives on observation and experimentation in science (Serie de filosofía y metodología de la ciencia) (pp. 51-69). Oleiros: Netbiblo.

2010

  • C. Baden-Fuller & M.S. Morgan (2010). Business models as models. Long Range Planning, 43 (2-3), 156-171. doi: 10.1016/j.lrp.2010.02.005

2008

  • M.S. Morgan (2008). Models. In S.N. Durlauf & L.E. Blume (Eds.), The new Palgrave dictionary of economics: Second edition: Volume 5 (pp. 654-661). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

2007

  • M.S. Morgan (2007). The curious case of the prisoner's dilemma: Model situation? In A.N.H. Creager, E. Lunbeck & M.N. Wise (Eds.), Science Without Laws: Models Systems, Cases, Exemplary Narratives (Science and cultural theory) (pp. 157-185). Durham: Duke University Press.
  • M.S. Morgan (2007). An analytical history of measuring practices: The case of velocities of money. In M. Boumans (Ed.), Measurement in Economics: A Handbook (pp. 105-132). Amsterdam e.a.: Elsevier Academic Press.

2006

2005

2004

  • M.S. Morgan & M.J. Boumans (2004). Secrets Hidden by Two-Dimensionality: The Economy as a Hydraulic Machine. In S. De Chadarevian & N. Hopwood (Eds.), Models: The Third Dimension of Science (Writing science) (pp. 369-401). Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  • M.S. Morgan (2004). Imagination and imaging in economic model-building. Philosophy of Science, 71 (5), 753-766.
  • M.S. Morgan (2004). Simulation: The birth of a technology to create ¿evidence¿ in economics. Revue d'Histoire des Sciences, 57 (2), 339-376.

2003

  • M.S. Morgan (2003). Economics. In T. Porter & D. Ross (Eds.), The Cambridge History of Science, Volume 7: The Modern Social Sciences. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • M.S. Morgan (2003). Experiments without material intervention: Model experiments, virtual experiments and virtually experiments. In H. Radder (Ed.), The Philosophy of Scientific Experimentation. University of Pittsbrugh Press.

2002

  • M.S. Morgan (2002). Model experiments and models in experiments. In L. Magnani & N.J. Nersessian (Eds.), Model-Based Reasoning: Science, Technology, Values (pp. 41-58). Kluwer Academic//Plenum Publisher.
  • M.S. Morgan (2002). History of econometrics. In N.J. Smelser & P.B. Baltes (Eds.), International Encyclopaedia of the Social and Behavioural Sciences (pp. 4065-4069). Oxford/Amsterdam: Elsevier.
  • H.B.J.B. Maas & M.S. Morgan (2002). Timing History: The Introduction of Graphical Analysis in 19th Century British Economics. Revue d'Histoire des Sciences Humaines, 7, 97-127.
  • M.S. Morgan (2002). How models help economists to know [Commentary on John Sutton's "Marshall's Tendencies - What Can Economists Know?"]. Economics and Philosophy, 18, 5-16.

2001

  • M.S. Morgan (2001). Making measuring instruments. History of political economy, 33, 235-251.
  • M.S. Morgan (2001). Models, stories and the economic world. Journal of Economic Methodology, 8 (3).
  • M.J. Boumans & M.S. Morgan (2001). 'Ceteris paribus' conditions: materiality and the application of economic theories. Journal of Economic Methodology, 8 (1), 11-26.

2000

  • M.S. Morgan & F. den Butter (2000). What makes the empirical models-policy interaction succesfull? In F. den Butter & M.S. Morgan (Eds.), Empirical Models and Policy Making: Interaction and Institutions (pp. 279-312). London/New York: Routledge.
  • M.S. Morgan & R.E. Backhouse (2000). Is data mining a methodological problem? Journal of Economic Methodology, 7 (2), 171-182.
  • M.S. Morgan (2000). Explanatory strategies for monetary policy analysis. In R.E. Backhouse & A. Salanti (Eds.), Macroeconomics and the Real World, Volume I: Econometric Techniques and Macroeconomics (pp. 141-153). Oxford: Oxford University Press.

1999

  • M.S. Morgan & J.R. Magnus (1999). Lessons from the Tacit Knowledge Experiment. In J.R. Magnus & M.S. Morgan (Eds.), Methodology and Tacit Knowledge: Two Experiments in Econometrics (pp. 375-381). Chichester/New York: John Wiley.
  • M.S. Morgan & J.R. Magnus (1999). Organisation of the Tacit Knowledge Experiment. In J.R. Magnus & M.S. Morgan (Eds.), Methodology and Tacit Knowledge: Two Experiments in Econometrics (pp. 311-413). Chichester/New York: John Wiley.
  • M.S. Morgan & J.R. Magnus (1999). Applied Econometrics and the Design of Two Experiments. In J.R. Magnus & M.S. Morgan (Eds.), Methodology and Tacit Knowledge: Two Experiments in Econometrics (pp. 1-10). Chichester/New York: John Wiley.
  • M.S. Morgan & M. Morrison (1999). Models as Mediating Instruments. In M. Morrison & M.S. Morgan (Eds.), Models as Mediators - Perspectives on Natural and Social Science (pp. 10-37). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • M.S. Morgan (1999). Learning from Models. In M. Morrison & M.S. Morgan (Eds.), Models as Mediators - Perspectives on Natural and Social Science (pp. 347-388). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

1998

  • M.S. Morgan & M. Rutherford (1998). American Economics: The Character of Transformation. History of political economy, 30, 1-26.
  • M.S. Morgan & F. den Butter (1998). What makes the empirical models-policy interaction successful? Economic Modelling, 15 (3), 443-475.
  • M.S. Morgan (1998). Haavelmo's Methodology. In W. Hands, U. Maki & J. Davis (Eds.), The Handbook of Economic Methodology (pp. 217-220). Cheltenham/Northampton: Edward Elgar.
  • M.S. Morgan (1998). Models. In W. Hands, U. Maki & J. Davis (Eds.), The Handbook of Economic Methodology (pp. 316-321). Cheltenham/Northampton: Edward Elgar.

1997

  • M.S. Morgan (1997). The Character of Rational Economic Man. Dialectik, 1997 (1), 77-94.
  • M.S. Morgan & J.R. Magnus (Eds.). (1997) Journal of Applied Econometrics, 12(5 Spec.Iss).
  • M.S. Morgan (1997). The Technology of Analogical Models: Irving Fisher's Monetary Worlds. Philosophy of Science, 64, 304-314.
  • M.S. Morgan & J.R. Magnus (1997). Design of the Experiment. Journal of Applied Econometrics, 12 (5), 459-465.
  • M.S. Morgan & J.R. Magnus (1997). Organization of the Experiment. Journal of Applied Econometrics, 12 (5), 467-476.
  • M.S. Morgan & J.R. Magnus (1997). The Data: A Short Description. Journal of Applied Econometrics, 12 (5), 651-661.

1996

  • M.S. Morgan (1996). Searching for causal relations in economic statistics: reflections from history. In S. Turner & V. McKim (Eds.), Causality in crisis: The new debate about causal structures. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press.
  • M.S. Morgan (1996). Idealization and modelling. Journal of Economic Methodology, 3 (1), 131-138.

1995

  • M.S. Morgan (1995). The history of econometrics: Errors and refutations. Econometric Theory, 11, 392-397.
  • M.S. Morgan (1995). Evolutionary metaphors in explanations of American industrial competition. In . et al & S. Maasen (Eds.), Biology as society, society as biology: Metaphors (Sociology of the Sciences Yearbook 1994, volume XVIII). Dordrecht: Kluwer.
  • M.S. Morgan, . Jinbang Kim & N. De Marchi (1995). Empirical model peculiarities and belief in the natural rate hypothesis. Journal of Econometrics, 67, 81-102.
  • M.S. Morgan & D.F. Hendry (1995). The foundations of econometric analysis. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.

2009

  • M.S. Morgan (2009). Seeking parts, looking for wholes. (intern rapport, History of Observation in Economics Working Paper Series, no 1). Amsterdam: Faculteit Economie en Bedrijfskunde.

2006

  • M.S. Morgan (2006). Measuring Instruments in Economics and the Velocity of Money. How Well Do 'Facts' Travel? (intern rapport, London School of Economics and Political Science Working Paper, no 13). Amsterdam: Faculteit Economie en Bedrijfskunde.

2003

  • M.S. Morgan (2003). Business Cycle: Representation and Measurement. In D. Ladiray (Ed.), Papers and proceedings of the Cooloquium on the History of the Business Cycle Analysis.

2001

  • M. Boumans & M.S. Morgan (2001). Ceteris paribus conditions: Materiality and the application of economic theory. Journal of Economic Methodology, 8 (1), 11-26.
  • M.S. Morgan (2001). The formation of 'modern' economics: Engineering and Ideology. LSE Working Papers in Economic History, 62/01.
  • M.S. Morgan (2001). The curious case of the prisoner's dilemma: Model situation? Exemplary narrative. Research Memoranda in History and Methodology of Economics - UvA-FEE, 4.

2000

  • M.S. Morgan (2000). Experiments Without Material Invention: Model Experiments, Virtual Experiments and Virtually Experiments. Research Memoranda in History and Methodology of Economics - UvA-FEE, 00-1.

1999

  • M.S. Morgan (1999). Models, stories and the economic world. Research Memoranda in History and Methodology of Economics - UvA-FEE, 99 (1).

1997

  • M.S. Morgan (1997). Learning from Models. Research Memoranda in History and Methodology of Economics - UvA-FEE, 97/1, 1-47.

1995

  • M.S. Morgan (1995). Searching for causal relations in economic statistics: Reflections from history. (extern rapport, Discussion paper, no 9/95). London, Verenigd Koninkrijk: LSE Centre for Philosophy of Natural and Social Sciences.

2008

  • M.S. Morgan (2008). "On a mission" with mutable mobiles. (extern rapport, Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel, no 34/08). London: Department of Economic History, London School of Economics.
  • M.S. Morgan (2008). 'Voice' and the facts and observations of experience. (extern rapport, Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel, no 31/08). London: Department of Economic History, London School of Economics.

1998

  • M.J. Boumans & M.S. Morgan (1998). The secrets hidden by two-dimensionality: Modelling the economy as a hydraulic system. (Preprints, History and Methodology of Economics, no 98-2). Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam.
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