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* [http://letters.salon.com/2d064d153746ee92c8fc5afb80b44576/author/ Blog]
* [http://letters.salon.com/2d064d153746ee92c8fc5afb80b44576/author/ Blog]
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=Gi1-hW3cfo4C&pg=PA226&lpg=PA226&dq=%22Herbert+Gintis%22+1939&source=web&ots=V1KObwAqcK&sig=efmIJZN2XPPXdBJ9xxCpjuNRd1Y&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=7&ct=result#PPA226,M1 Memoir, pages 226-232]
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=Gi1-hW3cfo4C&pg=PA226&lpg=PA226&dq=%22Herbert+Gintis%22+1939&source=web&ots=V1KObwAqcK&sig=efmIJZN2XPPXdBJ9xxCpjuNRd1Y&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=7&ct=result#PPA226,M1 Memoir, pages 226-232]
* [http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0262072521/qid%3D1104890645/sr%3D11-1/ref%3Dsr%5F11%5F1/002-1827497-3917607] Moral Sentiments and Material Interests
* [http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0262072521/qid%3D1104890645/sr%3D11-1/ref%3Dsr%5F11%5F1/002-1827497-3917607 Moral Sentiments and Material Interests]


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Revision as of 18:59, 7 June 2009

Herbert Gintis
BornFebruary 11, 1940
Philadelphia, PA
NationalityAmerican
Known forAltruism, Cooperation, Epistemic Game Theory, Cooperation, Gene-culture Coevolution, Contested Exchange, Behavioral Game Theory, Strong Reciprocity, Human capital, Unification of the Behavioral Sciences
Scientific career
FieldsEconomics
InstitutionsSanta Fe Institute and Central European University
Doctoral advisorsArthur Smithies and James Duesenberry
Doctoral studentsJeffrey Carpenter and Christina Fong

Herbert Gintis (born 1940) is an American behavioral scientist, educator, and author. He is notable for his foundational views on Altruism, Cooperation, Epistemic Game Theory, Gene-culture Coevolution, Efficiency wages, Strong Reciprocity, and Human capital theory. Gintis has also written extensively on behavioral, evolutionary, and epistemic game theory.

Gintis received his B.A. in Mathematics from University of Pennsylvania in 1961. The following year, he received an M.A. in Mathematics from Harvard University. In 1969, he received a Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard after acceptance of his dissertation, Alienation and power: towards a radical welfare economics.

He works extensively with economist, Samuel Bowles. Both Gintis and Bowles were asked by Martin Luther King Jr. to write papers for the 1968 Poor People's March. Gintis and others were also 1968 co-founders of Union for Radical Political Economics.[1]

Gintis is currently Professor at Central European University and External Professor at Santa Fe Institute

Author

Gintis is an editor of the Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization. He is the author of numerous scholarly articles and books, some of which include:

  • (2009). with Samuel Bowles, A Cooperative Species: Human Reciprocity and its Evolution, forthcoming.
  • (2009). The Bounds of Reason: Game Theory and the Unification of the Behavioral Sciences (Princeton University Press).
  • (2009). Game Theory Evolving: Second Edition (Princeton University Press).
  • (2009). "A New Nash Equilibrium Refinement: The Local Best Response Criterion," Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization.
  • (2009). with Jeffrey Carpenter, Samuel Bowles, and Sung Ha Hwang, "Strong Reciprocity and Team Production," forthcoming Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization.
  • (2009). with Ross Cressman and Thijs Ruijgrok, "Subgame Perfection in Evolutionary Dynamics with Recurrent Mutations," in J. Barkley Rosser (ed.) Handbook of Research on Complexity (Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar: 353--368.
  • (2008). "Cooperation and Punishment," Science 7 March: 1345--1346.
  • (2007). "The Evolution of Private Property," Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 64,1: 1--16.
  • (2007). "A Framework for the Unification of the Behavioral Sciences," Behavioral and Brain Sciences 30: 1--61.
  • (2007). "The Dynamics of General Equilibrium," Economic Journal, 117: 1280--1309.
  • (2007). with Ernst Fehr, "Human Nature and Social Cooperation: Analytical and Experimental Foundations," Annual Review of Sociology, 33: 43--64.
  • (2007). with Samuel Bowles, "Homo Economicus and Zoon Politicon: Behavioral Game Theory and Political Behavior," Oxford Handbook of

Contextual Political Analysis.

  • (2006). "The Emergence of a Price System from Decentralized Bilateral Exchange," Contributions to Theoretical Economics 6,1,13.
  • (2006). with Samuel Bowles, "Evolutionary Origins of Collective Action," in Donald Wittman and Barry Weingast, Oxford Handbook of Political Economy (Oxford, Oxford University Press)
  • (2005). with Samuel Bowles and Melissa Osborne, Unequal Chances: Family Background and Economic Success (Princeton University Press)
  • (2005). with Samuel Bowles, "The Evolutionary Origins of Collective Action," Oxford Handbook of Political Economy.
  • (2005). with Samuel Bowles, Robert Boyd, and Ernst Fehr, Moral Sentiments and Material Interests: On the Foundations of Cooperation in Economic Life (Cambridge, MIT Press).
  • (2005). et al. "'Economic Man' in Cross-cultural Perspective: Ethnography and Experiments from 15 Small-scale Societies," Behavioral

and Brain Sciences 28: 795--855.

  • (2004). with Joe Henrich, Robert Boyd, Samuel Bowles, Colin Camerer and Ernst Fehr, Foundations of Human Sociality: Ethnography and Experiments in Fifteen Small-scale Societies (Oxford: Oxford University Press).
  • (2004). "Economic Interests: Do Strangers Cooperate when they have to Work Together?" Nature 431 (16 September):245--246.
  • (2004). with Samuel Bowles,"The Evolution of Strong Reciprocity: Cooperation in Heterogeneous Populations" Theoretical Population Biology 61: 17--28.
  • (2003). with Samuel Bowles,"Persistent Parochialism: Trust and Exclusion in Ethnic Networks," Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 55,1: 1--23.
  • (2003). with Samuel Bowles, Robert Boyd and Ernst Fehr, "Explaining Altruistic Behavior in Humans," Evolution & Human Behavior 24:153-172.
  • (2003). with Robert Boyd, Samuel Bowles and Peter J. Richerson,"Evolution of Altruistic Punishment" Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 100,6: 3531--3535.
  • (2003). "Solving The Puzzle of Prosociality," Rationality and Society 15,2.
  • (2003). "The Hitchhiker's Guide to Altruism: Genes-Culture Coevolution and the Internalization of Norms," Journal of Theoretical Biology 220,4: 407--418.
  • (2002). with Samuel Bowles, "Homo Reciprocans: Altruistic Punishment of Free Riders," Nature 415, 10 January: 125--128.
  • (2002). with Samuel Bowles, "Intergenerational Inequality," Journal of Economic Perspectives 16,3:3--30.
  • (2002). with Christina M. Fong and Samuel Bowles, "Reciprocity and the Welfare State," in Jean Mercier-Ythier, Serge Kolm and Louis-Andre Gerard-Varet," (eds.) Handbook on the Economics of Giving, Reciprocity and Altruism (Amsterdam: Elsevier).
  • (2002). with Samuel Bowles, "Social Capital and Community Governance," Economic Journal 112,483: 419--436.
  • (2001). with Samuel Bowles and Melissa Osborne, "The Determinants of Individual Earnings: Skills, Preferences, and Schooling," Journal of Economic Literature, 39,4: 1137-1176.
  • (2001). with Eric Alden Smith and Samuel Bowles, "Costly Signaling and Cooperation," Journal of Theoretical Biology 213: 103-119.
  • (2001). et al. "Cooperation, Reciprocity and Punishment in Fifteen Small-scale Societies," American Economic Review 91: 73--78.
  • (2001). with Samuel Bowles, "Contested Exchange: A New Microeconomics of Capitalism," in Geoffrey M. Hodgson, Makoto Itoh, and Nobuharu Yokokawa (eds.) Capitalism in Evolution (Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar): 21--35.
  • (2001) with Samuel Bowles, "The Intergenerational Transmission of Economic Status: Education, Class, and Genetics," in N. J. Smelser and Paul Baltes, eds., International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences (Oxford, Pergamon).
  • (2000). "Strong Reciprocity and Human Sociality," Journal of Theoretical Biology 206: 169--179.
  • (2000). Game Theory Evolving (Princeton: Princeton University Press)
  • (2000). with Samuel Bowles, "Walrasian Economics in Retrospect" Quarterly Journal of Economics: 1411-1439.
  • (2000). "Beyond Homo Economicus," Ecological Economics, 35,3: 311--322.
  • (1999). with Samuel Bowles, "Is Inequality Passe?" Boston Review 23,6: 4--35.
  • (1999). with Samuel Bowles, Recasting Egalitarianism: New Rules for Markets, States, and Communities, Erik Olin Wright (ed.), (New York: Verso).
  • (1998). with Samuel Bowles, "The Moral Economy of Community: Structured Populations and the Evolution of Prosocial Norms" Evolution & Human Behavior 19,1: 3--25.
  • (1998). with Pranab Bardhan and Samuel Bowles, "Wealth Inequality, Credit Constraints, and Economic Performance" Anthony Atkinson and Francois Bourguignon (eds.), in Handbook of Income Distribution (North Holland).
  • (1998). with Samuel Bowles, "How Communities Govern: The Structural Basis of Prosocial Norms," in Louis Putterman and Avner Ben-Ner (eds.) Economics, Values and Organizations (New York: Cambridge University Press).
  • (1998). with Samuel Bowles, "Power in Competitive Exchange," in Samuel Bowles, Mauricio Franzini, and Ugo Pagano (eds.) The Politics and Economics of Power (London: Routledge).
  • (1997). "A Markov Model of Production, Trade, and Money: Theory and Artificial Life Simulation," Computational and Mathematical Organization Theory (3,1): 19--41.
  • (1996). with Samuel Bowles, "Efficient Redistribution: New Rules for Markets, States, and Communities," Politics & Society 24,4: 307-342.
  • (1995). with Samuel Bowles, "Productivity Enhancing Egalitarian Policies," International Labour Review, 134,4-5: 559-585.
  • (1995). Herbert Gintis, "The Political Economy of School Choice," Teachers College Record 96,3.
  • (1993). with Samuel Bowles, "The Democratic Firm," in David Copp, Jean Hampton, and John Roemer (eds.) The Idea of Democracy (Cambridge:

Cambridge University Press):375--399.

  • (1993). with Samuel Bowles, "The Revenge of Homo Economicus: Contested Exchange and the Revival of Political Economy," Journal of Economic Perspectives 7,1: 83--102.
  • (1993). with Samuel Bowles. "Power in Economic Theory," in Philip Arestis and Malcom C. Sawyer, The Handbook of Radical Political Economy (London: Edward Elgar)
  • (1991). "Where Did Schumpeter Go Wrong?: Understanding Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy," Challenge.
  • (1989). "Financial Markets and the Political Structure of the Enterprise," Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 11: 311--322.
  • (1989). "The Power to Switch: On the Political Economy of Consumer Sovereignty," in Samuel Bowles, Richard C. Edwards, and William G.

Shepherd (eds.), Unconventional Wisdom: Essays in Honor of John Kenneth Galbraith (New York: Houghton-Mifflin).

  • (1988). with Samuel Bowles, "Contested Exchange: Political Economy and Modern Economic Theory," American Economic Review 78,2: 145--150.
  • (1986). with Samuel Bowles Democracy and Capitalism: Property, Theory, and the Contradictions of Modern Social Theory (New York: Basic Books).
  • (1983). "Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy Forty Years Later," Journal of Economic Literature.
  • (1982). with Samuel Bowles, "The Crisis of Liberal Democratic Capitalism," Politics and Society 11: 51--93.
  • (1980). "Theory, Practice, and the Tools of Communicative Discourse," Socialist Review 50-51: 189--232.
  • (1978). with Barry Clark, "Rawlsian Justice and Economic Systems," Philosophy and Public Affairs: 302--325.
  • (1976). with Samuel Bowles, Schooling in Capitalist America: Educational Reform and the Contradictions of Economic Life (New York: Basic Books).
  • (1976). "The Nature of the Labor Exchange of the Theory of Capitalist Production," Review of Radical Political Economics 8,2: 36--54.
  • (1975). with Samuel Bowles, "The Problem with Human Capital Theory," American Economic Review 65,2: 74--82.
  • (1975). "Welfare Economics and Individual Development: A Reply to Talcott Parsons," Quarterly Journal of Economics (June).
  • (1974). "Welfare Criteria with Endogenous Preferences: The Economics of Education," International Economic Review 15,2: 415--429.
  • (1973). with Samuel Bowles, "IQ in the U.S. Class Structure: A Statistical Analysis," Social Policy 3.
  • (1972). with Christopher Jencks, et al., Inequality: A Reassessment of the Effect of Family and Schooling in America (New York: Basic Books).
  • (1972). "Consumer Behavior and the Concept of Sovereignty," American Economic Review 62,2: 267--278.
  • (1972). "A Radical Analysis of Welfare Economics and Individual Development," Quarterly Journal of Economics 86: 572-599.
  • (1972). "Activism and Counterculture: The Dialectics of Consciousness in the Corporate State," Telos 12.
  • (1971). "Education, Technology, and the Characteristics of Worker Productivity," American Economic Review 61,2: 266-279.

References

  1. ^ Arestis, P. (2000). A biographical dictionary of dissenting economists. Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. p. 75. ISBN 1858985609. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)

See also

External links

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