8am 212!

Theories, by definition, are simplifications of reality. This must be so given the complexity of the real world. The intellectual problem for economists is how to capture, in the form of specific models, the complicated interactive behaviour of millions of individuals engaged in eco- nomic activity. Huntington (1996) has succinctly outlined the general case for explicit modelling as an essential aid to thought:

Simplified paradigms or maps are indispensable for human thought. On the one hand, we may explicitly formulate theories or models and consciously use them to guide behaviour. Alternatively, we may deny the need for such guides and assume that we will act only in terms of specific ‘objective’ facts, dealing with each case ‘on its own merits’. If we assume this, however, we delude ourselves. For in the back of our minds are hidden assumptions, biases, and prejudices that determine how we perceive reality, what facts we look at, and how we judge their importance and merits.

alternative ideas prevent intellectual complacency where teachers and learner’s fall asleep as soon as there are no enemies on the feild. In physics terms entropy!