Loose, Vague, and Indeterminate

By George Mason Economics Society

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Category: Social Sciences

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Episodes: 14

Description

Loose, Vague, and Indeterminate is the podcast of the Economics Society at George Mason University. The title is a phrase used by Adam Smith in The Theory of Moral Sentiments to describe the set of rules that are not "precise and accurate." Since economics is all about people and the decisions they make, very little of it is precise and accurate. Every Friday, this podcast dives into the looseness, vagueness, and indeterminacy with interviews of undergraduate students, graduate students, professors, and outsiders exploring economics from all angles.

Episode Date
Peter Boettke on History of GMU Economics (Part 2: Economic Boogaloo)
Mar 06, 2020
Peter Boettke on History of GMU Economics (Part 1)
Feb 28, 2020
Bryan Cutsinger on Monetary Policy and Becoming a Professor
Feb 21, 2020
Janelle Cammenga on Tax Policy and Working in D.C.
Feb 07, 2020
The Rustici Rules Episode
Jan 31, 2020
Molly Harnish on Internships, Environmental Economics, and Fonts
Dec 06, 2019
Rosolino Candela on Price Theory
Nov 22, 2019
Andrew Humphries on Teaching Economics
Nov 15, 2019
Nick McFaden's Post-Presidency Policy Palooza
Nov 08, 2019
Marcus Shera on New Institutional Economics and the Armenian Genocide
Nov 01, 2019
Jon Murphy on Teaching Economics, the Nobel Prize, and What Economists Should Do
Oct 31, 2019
Jacob Hall on Hume's History of England
Oct 31, 2019
Hitchhiking and Hazlitt
Oct 31, 2019
Daniel Klein on Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments
Oct 31, 2019