The rise and fall of catastrophe theory applications in economics: Was the baby thrown out with the bathwater?

Abstract

The science writer, John Horgan (1995, 1997), has ridiculed what he labels “chaoplexology,” a combination of chaos theory and complexity theory. A central charge against this alleged monstrosity is that it, or more precisely its two component parts separately, are (or were) fads, intellectual bubbles of little consequence. They would soon disappear and deservedly so, once scholars and intellects realized what worthless dross they truly were (or are). As the culminating centerpiece of his argument, Horgan introduced the label, “the four C’s,” which consist of cybernetics, catastrophe theory, chaos theory, and complexity theory.[2] More..

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