This book offers a comprehensive exploration of the major key concepts
common to economics and evolutionary biology. Written by a group of
philosophers of science, biologists and economists, it proposes analyses
of the meaning of twenty-five concepts from the viewpoint respectively
of economics and of evolutionary biology -each followed by a short
synthesis emphasizing major discrepancies and commonalities. This
analysis is surrounded by chapters exploring the nature of the analogy
that connects evolution and economics, and chapters that summarize the
major teachings of the analyses of the keywords. Most scholars in
biology and in economics know that their science has something in common
with the other one, for instance the notions of competition and
resources. Textbooks regularly acknowledge that the two fields share
some history - Darwin borrowing from Malthus the insistence on scarcity
of resources, and then behavioral ecologists adapting and transforming
game theory into evolutionary game theory in the 1980s, while Friedman
famously alluded to a Darwinian process yielding the extant firms.
However, the real extent of the similarities, the reasons why they are
so close, and the limits and even the nature of the analogy connecting
economics and biological evolution, remain inexplicit. This book
proposes basis analyses that can sustain such explication. It is
intended for researchers, grad students and master students in
evolutionary and in economics, as well as in philosophy of science.