The Internet and the Structure of Discourse: The Websites of Economists at Harvard and George Mason

Originally published in Econ Journal Watch

This paper investigates the websites of economists at Harvard University and George Mason University. It draws a contrast between the two departments by using Robert Nelson's distinction between the scholastic and the pietistic approaches to knowledge and discourse. Scholasticism is hierarchical in structure and tends to produce work that is inaccessible to lay readers.

This paper investigates the websites of economists at Harvard University and George Mason University.  It draws a contrast between the two departments by using Robert Nelson's distinction between the scholastic and the pietistic approaches to knowledge and discourse. Scholasticism is hierarchical in structure and tends to produce work that is inaccessible to lay readers. Pietism is flat in structure and strives to communicate directly with lay readers. The Internet enables economic discourse in the pietistic vein, notably direct communication with the laity and other forms of public discourse. From the economists' material found online, the publications of various types and the online availability of listed works are counted and compared. The data helps to characterize Harvard as relatively scholastic and GMU as relatively pietistic. The intention is not to criticize Harvard for being too scholastic, nor to celebrate George Mason for being pietistic. The motivations are simply to advance some ideas about how the Internet might affect economic discourse and to suggest that the extent and forms of web utilization serve as a kind of metric on the scholastic-pietistic continuum.

Find article at Econ Journal Watch. 

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