Smith argues mathematicians and natural philosophers experience little acrimony because the merit of their work is objectively clear to all, whereas poets, whose merit is loose, vague, and indeterminate, form cabals, cliques, and factions over disputed standing—and Roberts extends this to economics, where the absence of clear merit criteria leads the profession to rely on mathematical ability as a proxy and to fracture into factions over who is a good economist.

causalpending

Speaker

Russ Roberts

Evidence Quote

you get factions in economics about who's who's good and who isn't.

Source

Dan Klein on The Theory of Moral Sentiments, Episode 4--A Discussion of Part III 04/29/2009EconTalk
Created: 6/15/2026, 9:36:51 AM

My Notes

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