Economics as Moral Science investigates the problem of the ethical
neutrality of "mainstream" economic theory within the context of the
methodology of economics as a science. Against the conventional wisdom,
the author argues that there are serious moral presuppositions to the
theory, but that economics could still count as a scientific or rational
form of inquiry. The basic questions addressed - the ethical
implications of economics, its status as a scientific mode of
theory-construction, and the relation between these factors - are
absolutely fundamental ones for an understanding of contemporary
economics, the philosophy of the human sciences, and our current market
culture. Moreover, the study provides a thorough philosophical analysis
of the critical issues at stake from the inside, from the credible
perspective of a particular, but foundational economic theory - the
neoclassical theory of rational choice.