Imperfect Knowledge
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	How This Regional Bank Mortgage Lender Crisis is DifferentJun 12, 2023 Every banking crisis has its own overarching narratives and coincidental streams of various sub-narratives that course through the marketplace day to day. 
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	Revealed: New Insight into What Really Drives the Stock MarketFeb 9, 2022 In a new book, How Novelty and Narratives Drive the Stock Market, economist Nicholas Mangee examines the influence of stories on stock market outcomes in an uncertain world. 
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			Working Paper Series
	  
	Why Diagnostic Expectations Cannot Replace REHJan 2022 A formal argument that Kahneman and Tversky’s compelling empirical findings, and those of other behavioral economists, do not provide a basis for a general approach to specifying participants’ “predictable errors.” 
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	Introducing the Novelty-Narrative HypothesisDec 16, 2021 A new view of stock market instability under Knightian uncertainty 
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			Working Paper
	  
	Asset Prices Under Knightian UncertaintyDec 2021 A tractable formalization of the Knightian uncertainty faced by an economist and market participants in an intertemporal asset-price model. 
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	When Knightian Uncertainty Becomes ObviousOct 7, 2021 Stock-Price Volatility During the Pandemic 
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			Working Paper Series
	  
	Expectations Concordance and Stock Market Volatility: Knightian Uncertainty in the Year of the PandemicOct 2021 Stock-Price Volatility During the Pandemic 
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	Why We Need the Knightian Uncertainty HypothesisMar 4, 2019 INET’s President introduces a new research program that challenges orthodox assumptions about the limits of economic knowledge 
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			Working Paper Series
	  
	The Knightian Uncertainty Hypothesis: Unforeseeable Change and Muth’s Consistency Constraint in Modeling Aggregate OutcomesMar 2019 This paper introduces the Knightian Uncertainty Hypothesis (KUH), a new approach to macroeconomics and finance theory. 
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	How Imperfect Knowledge Shapes Financial MarketsFeb 15, 2019 Asset markets are indispensable in harnessing society’s diverse views and insights about future business performance. But those views are shaped as much by emotion and crowd mentality as by rational expectations. 
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	New Evidence on the Portfolio Balance Approach to Currency ReturnsFeb 2019 Asset markets are indispensable in harnessing society’s diverse views and insights about future business performance. But those views are shaped as much by emotion and crowd mentality as by rational expectations. 
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	INET Research in a Stressful YearFeb 23, 2018 In the face of laissez-faire capitalism at home and resurgent nationalism across the globe, INET offers an innovative look at the causes of—and solutions for—the problems that ail a fissuring world economy. 
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	World Economic RoundtableDiscussionExplaining a Decade of Stagnation: Where Do We Go From Here? Dec 14, 2017 The World Economic Roundtable seeks to help the business, investment, and policy communities understand ongoing changes in the world economy and to promote a discussion of ideas that can advance the goal of a widely shared global prosperity. 
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			Conference paper
	  
	Imperfect Knowledge, Unpredictability and the Failures of Modern MacroeconomicsOct 2017 After re-iterating five well-known theorems about the properties of conditional expectations in stationary settings—such as providing unbiased minimum mean square error predictions despite in- complete information, and the law of iterated expectations—we clarify unpredictability and illustrate its prevalence empirically. 
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	From the Prevailing Paradigm to the Qualitative Expectations HypothesisOct 2017 In the paper that we present this afternoon, Soren Johansen, Anders Rahbek, Morten Tabor, and I introduce the Qualitative Expectations Hypothesis (QEH) as a new approach to modeling macroeconomic and financial outcomes. 
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	New Developments in the Economics of Imperfect KnowledgeOct 22, 2017 | 03:30 How we can create useful economic theory that recognizes that the future is radically uncertain? 
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	The Four Horsemen of the EconopocalypseJul 26, 2017 If standard economic theory can’t explain a traffic jam, how can it cope with crises? 
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			Working Paper Series
	  
	The Qualitative Expectations HypothesisJun 2017 Model Ambiguity, Consistent Representations of Market Forecasts, and Sentiment 
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	Against False Arrogance of Economic KnowledgeApr 17, 2017 “The humility to accept that economic propositions cannot be universal would save us from self-defeating arrogance.” Economist Amit Bhaduri adds his perspective to our Experts on Trial discussion. 
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	Ferguson: Monetary Policy Can't Levitate a Broken EconomyJan 9, 2017 As part of an International Economy symposium, INET Research Director Tom Ferguson assessed the challenge facing central bankers through the lens of the missing virtues of Dorothy’s travel companions in the Wizard of Oz 
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	INET Research in a Year of Living DangerouslyDec 29, 2016 Notes from the Institute’s Director of Research on some significant papers and contributions produced in 2016 under the INET rubric 
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	Contemplating the Age of Hyper-UncertaintyDec 19, 2016 In the 40th anniversary year of John Kenneth Galbraith’s Age of Uncertainty, the 1970s look remarkably stable in comparison with today’s turbulent world 
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	Volcker: Tackle the Unfinished Business of 2008Dec 5, 2016 The Volcker Alliance has launched a series of new papers with important proposals for reforming financial regulations to guard against future crises 
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	Johnson: The Fed is losing its aura of expertiseSep 30, 2016 Past failures, present uncertainty, and a challenging political environment have vastly complicated the central bank’s task, says Institute President Rob Johnson 
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	Monetary Policy Family Reunion at Jackson HoleAug 31, 2016 Like any family reunion, the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium may have been as significant for what was said as it was for what was not discussed 
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	How Do Investors Approach the Stock Market in a Wild Election Cycle?Jun 1, 2016 Neither the Rational Expectations Hypothesis nor behavioral finance approaches alone provides an adequate predictor of investor behavior, argues Roman Frydman 
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	Stock-Market Expectations: Econometric Evidence that both REH and Behavioral Insights MatterMay 2016 Behavioral finance views stock-market investors’ expectations as largely unrelated to fundamental factors. Relying on survey data, this paper presents econometric evidence that fundamentals are a major driver of investors’ expectations. 
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	Learning, Expectations, and the Financial Instability HypothesisNov 2015 This paper analyzes what assumptions on formation of expectations are consistent with Minsky’s Financial Instability Hypothesis (FIH) and its corollaries. 
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	What Can We Really Know About the Future of Stock Prices?Nov 17, 2015 A gap between theory and reality has haunted economists. 
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	Matching the Moment, But Missing the Point?Oct 19, 2015 This essay critically evaluates the benefits and costs of the dominant methodology in macroeconomics, the DSGE approach. Although the approach has led to great progress in some areas, it has also created biases and blind spots in the profession that hold back our understanding and our ability to govern the macroeconomy. There is great scope for progress in macroeconomics by judiciously pushing the boundaries of some of the methodological restrictions imposed by the DSGE approach. 
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	The Cold War Hot House for Modeling Strategies at the Carnegie Institute of TechnologyOct 2015 US Military needs during the Cold War induced a mathematical modeling of rational allocation and control processes while simultaneously binding that rationality with computational reality. Modeling strategies to map the optimal to the operational ensued and eventually became a driving force in the development of macroeconomic dynamics. 
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	Intersections of Psychology and EconomicsSep 11, 2015 Tania Singer on the key importance of understanding preferences and behavioral change. 
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	How Dated Theories & Underlying Research Misguide PolicyJul 15, 2015 The financial crisis of 2008 was unforeseen to a significant extent. One reason is that the dominant academic theories influencing political decision makers ignore recent advances and instead rely largely on models and decision science dating back to the Second World War. 
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	New Climate-Economic ThinkingApr 21, 2015 
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	George Soros on the Future of EuropeApr 10, 2015 | 03:30 
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			Conference paper
	  
	Reflexivity, expectations feedback and almost self-fulfilling equilibria: economic theory, empirical evidence and laboratory experimentsApr 2015 We discuss recent work on bounded rationality and learning in relation to Soros’ principle of reflexivity and stress the empirical importance of non-rational, almost self-fulfilling equilibria in positive feedback systems. 
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			Working Paper Series
	  
	Change and Rationality in Macroeconomics and Finance Theory: A New Rational Expectations HypothesisMar 2015 We call attention to the class of models that serve as the foundation for the rational expectations hypothesis (REH). Models in this class rule out completely any structural change that cannot be fully anticipated with a probabilistic or other quantitative rule. REH models are abstractions of rational decision-making, but only in a hypothetical world in which participants can fully anticipate when and how they might revise their understanding of the process driving outcomes. 
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			Working paper
	  
	Networks in the LaboratoryFeb 2015 This chapter surveys experimental research on networks in economics. 
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	Much Ado About Cyber SecurityJan 5, 2015 Private data is leaked more and more in our society. Wikileaks, Facebook, and identity theft are just three examples. Network defenses are constantly under attack from cyber criminals, organized hacktivists, and even disgruntled ex-employees. 
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	Reflexivity and Knightean Uncertainty: Implications for EconomicsApr 10, 2014 | 02:45—04:00 
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	Toward an Intellectual History of UncertaintyApr 2014 Economists discussing the problem of radical uncertainty commonly invoke Frank Knight’s classic definition in Risk, Uncertainty and Profit, but only rarely venture to explore the broader contours of his argument. 
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	The Economics of Radical UncertaintyApr 10, 2014 | 11:00—12:30 
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	Modeling a World of Imperfect KnowledgeDec 21, 2013 Does it matter if the Rational Expectations Hypothesis is unrealistic? 
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	Our Hansen MomentDec 5, 2013 The main goal of the macroeconomist is to understand the sources behind business cycles and the behavior of financial markets in the modern economy. 
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	Finance and the Death of TrustOct 27, 2013 The destruction of trust is not an accident. 
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	We Can Do BetterOct 24, 2013 In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, distrust in the financial sector was widespread. Even after the mess appeared to be cleaned up, the uncertainty over whether the worst was over remained real. 
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	Trust and FinanceOct 24, 2013 Finance is built on trust. It is based on promises about tomorrow, often paper promises backed by nothing other than words on a page. When trust in those promises breaks down, so too does the financial system. That is the lesson of thousands of years of history. 
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	What is Economic Success?Oct 11, 2013 “You are now leaving the world as you know it.” 
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	Five Years on from Lehman: The More Things Change, the More They Stay the SameSep 22, 2013 Sadly, it is questionable whether the economy has really improved. 
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	Lehman Was Not Alone – Measuring System Risk in the 2008 CrisisSep 21, 2013 what would measures of systematic risk have indicated to Treasury Secretary Paulsen if they had been available at that time? 
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	The Failure of Free-Market FinanceSep 16, 2013 Five years after the collapse of the U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers, the world has still not addressed the fundamental cause of the subsequent financial crisis – an excess of debt. And that is why economic recovery has progressed much more slowly than anyone expected (in some countries, it has not come at all). 
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	Economic Analysis Isn’t Objective – It’s As Personal As It GetsSep 14, 2013 What happens when professionals lose touch with the people they’re supposed to serve? 
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	Central Banks in Balance Sheet Recessions: A Search for Correct ResponseApr 2013 These are extraordinary times for central banks. Near zero interest rates and massive liquidity injections are still failing to bring life back to so many economies in the developed world. 
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	Toward a Supply-Side Theory of Financial InnovationApr 2013 Innovation. The word is evocative of ideas, products and processes which have somehow made the world a better place. Prior to the global financial crisis, many viewed financial innovation as unequivocally falling into this category. 
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	The Future of Central BankingApr 2013 The exteriors of major central banks may be solid marble and doric columns, but, inside, monetary policy remains a work in progress. 
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	The Future of Central BankingApr 5, 2013 | 02:30—04:30 
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	Financial Stability Working GroupApr 5, 2013 | 08:30—10:45 
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	A Keynes-IKE Model of Currency Risk: A CVAR InvestigationApr 2013 A core puzzle in Önancial economics is the inability of standard risk-premium models to account for excess returns in currency and other asset markets. 
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	The Imperfect Knowledge Economics (IKE) Approach to Modeling An Open WorldApr 4, 2013 | 09:50—10:30 
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	Rationality and the Meese and Rogoff Exchange-Rate-Disconnect Puzzle: Learning vs. Contingent KnowledgeApr 2013 There is much anecdotal evidence in the popular media, backed up by survey research, that participants in currency markets pay close attention to fundamental economic variables in forming their forecasts of future exchange rates. 
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	The Contingent Expectations Hypothesis: Rationality and Contingent Knowledge in Macroeconomics and Finance TheoryApr 2013 For macroeconomists, an individual is rational if she uses her understanding of the way the economy works in making decisions that do not conflict with her objectives. 
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	Rationality in the Present-Value Model of Stock Prices: Fundamentals, Psychology, and Structural ChangeApr 2013 The present-value model of stock prices is a workhorse in financial economics. The model relates today’s price of a stock (or a basket of stocks) to the market’s forecasts of next-period’s price and dividend, appropriately discounted. 
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	Forward-Rate Bias, Contingent Knowledge, and Risk: Evidence from Developed and Developing CountriesApr 2013 In this paper, we examine one of the core puzzles in International Macroeconomics, the so-called “forward-discount anomaly.” 
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	The Econometrics of Imperfect Knowledge EconomicsApr 2013 A core premise of contemporary economic models is that researchers can adequately specify in probabilistic terms how individuals alter the way they make decisions and how the processes underpinning market outcomes unfold over time. 
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	Expectational coordination failures and Market outcomes’ volatilityApr 2013 The first part of this text comes back on the standard economic viewpoint on expectational coordination, a viewpoint that the recent events have challenged. 
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	Endogenising UncertaintyApr 2013 Uncertainty is an unavoidable feature of economic life, although we may cope with it sometimes by ignoring it. Institutions, conventions and behaviour are all conditioned by uncertainty, and they in turn condition uncertainty in a reflexive manner. 
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	Time and Expectations in Economic AnalysisApr 4, 2013 | 08:45—09:45 
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	Monetary and Financial Stability: Lessons from the Crisis and from classic economics textsApr 2013 My remarks today will be focused primarily on features of the developed world’s financial system which led to the crisis of 2008 and to the Great Recession that followed, from which we are only slowly and painfully emerging. 
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	Comments by William White on the Presentation by Lord Adair TurnerApr 2013 In his recent lecture at the Cass Business School, Lord Turner noted that even mentioning the possibility of overt monetary financing was akin to breaking a taboo. 
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	Macroeconomic Policy and Economic Stability: Lessons of the Historical Experience with Fiat Money and the Implications for the FutureApr 3, 2013 | 11:30—12:30 
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	Opening Models of Asset Prices and Risk to Non-Routine ChangeApr 17, 2012 Paper revised for the Institute’s Plenary Conference in Berlin 
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	Financial Instability Mini-DocumentaryApr 14, 2012 Financial stability, or the lack thereof. 
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	Financial Instability after Minsky:Heterogeneity, Agent Based Models and Credit NetworksApr 2012 Albeit the majority of the profession either ignores Minskyís Financial Instability Hypothesis (FIH) or considers it plainly wrong, at least since the mid-80’s a few influential economists —who have certainly not embraced any unorthodoxcredo —have grown more receptive to this idea and eager to incorporate it in their models, even if diluted and sometimes disguised in order to make it more palatable to the conventional “representative” macroeconomist 
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	Andrew Haldane: Financial Arms RacesApr 2012 Elephant seals have got too big for their beaches. A large specimen might weigh over 8000 lbs (3700 kg).Their size has a simple evolutionary explanation. Large males fight for the right to mate with a whole beach full of females. For elephant seals it is, quite literally, winner-takes-all. And the key to winning is simple – size. 
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	Real vs. Imagined Financial Markets The Regulatory ChallengeApr 2012 We have grown accustomed to regulating financial markets based on imagined, not real markets. Real markets are shaped by and co-evolve with institutional arrangements within two fundamental constraints: Imperfect knowledge and the threat of illiquidity. 
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	Finance and Growth: When Credit Helps, and When it HindersApr 2012 The financial sector can support growth but it can also cause crisis. The present crisis has exposedgaps in economists’ understanding of this dual potential. 
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	Instability in Financial Markets: Sources and RemediesApr 2012 In the seemingly never-ending aftermath to the economic crisis that began in 2007, there is little disagreement that financial markets are characterized by instability rather than stability. 
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	How Can We Create a Financial System That Is Socially Useful?Apr 13, 2012 | 06:55—08:45 Many feel that due to its size and scale the financial system has become a burden on society rather than a servant to it. What are the key elements of a productive financial sector? 
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	Instability in Financial Markets: Sources and Remedies The View from Economic HistoryApr 2012 Taking a long‐run view from economic history, I make three points about instability in financial markets. First, I argue that economic historians have a relatively good understanding of the proximate causes of financial crises. 
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	Instability in Financial Markets: Sources and RemediesApr 13, 2012 | 10:00—12:05 What creates instability in financial markets? How does the weight of debt, the structure of expectations, or radical uncertainty contribute to instability? 
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	The Future of EuropeApr 12, 2012 
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	Change and Expectations in Macroeconomic Models: Recognizing the Limits to KnowabilityApr 2012 In modern economies, individuals and companies engage in innovative activities, discovering new ways to use existing physical and human capital, and new technologies in which to invest. The institutional and broader social context within which these activities take place also changes in novel ways. 
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	What Can Economists Know? Rethinking the Foundations of Economic UnderstandingApr 11, 2012 | 11:00—02:00 The economics profession stands on the fragile foundation of presuppositions adopted by professional agreement rather than as a result of empirical observation. 
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	Human DecisionsApr 11, 2012 | 03:00—04:45 The human brain relies on three devices for its decisions: emotion controls; addictive learning; and intellectual processing. Understanding the conditions under which the three devices are engaged is essential for conscious decision-making. 
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	Paradigm LostApr 11, 2012 | 09:15—10:15 
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	Challenging the FoundationApr 11, 2012 George Soros, Axel Leijonhufvud and Perry Mehrling in Berlin, Germany (2012).