Statistics has failures? Yes. Is it science? Yes. Same applies to economics.BrooklynRedLeg wrote:Well, the problem here is I have repeatedly stated that Economics is not science.
Who said anything about banning you? You can at most get this thread flushed to where all threads that are ruined by dogpiling and idiotic statements end up. Am I that scary?BrooklynRedLeg wrote:However, I don't want to get banned so I'll concede to whatever you want.
Yet private entities and governments manipulate the economy on a daily basis. Some fairly simplistic shit, like supply-demand, etc. is quite repeatable and the number of factors is not insane. Long-term is another thing alltogether; but economics evolved from primitive static analysis to more complex dynamic analysis exactly because static models are only moderately useful. And yes, of course it leads to "unintended consequences", but anybody who does anything is better than a do-nothing. Such is the problem.BrooklynRedLeg wrote:However, the simple fact is that actions that manipulate an economy lead to all kinds of unintended consequences.
People's lives are routinely fucked around by everyone and his dog. Your boss fired you? When he did that, I bet he didn't think about all the hardship you'll endure looking for another job, which you may not find. So how is he different from an economist who likewise issues a directive without thinking about your little life, BrooklynRedLeg? He's not. In fact, he's worse, because he simply does not consider any other factors at all, only his own desire at the current minute. An economist may at least try to compose a multi-factor analysis and stuff like that. An economic agent who commands dozens of other people does not, and yet I don't see you advocating complete anarchy and destruction of all hierarchy because people on top may take the wrong decisions.BrooklynRedLeg wrote:People's lives are not toys to be moved around at someone's whim because they think they know best how to solve the problems of such a complex system. History is replete with fools that did such things.
So unless you logically follow this to a "forbid all science because they may make an error that would cost people!" and "forbid all authority because authority makes errors in decisions which can cost people!", your hollow defence of unscientific lavit manus coram populo, a description of your own lack of understanding, do not project this on all science.
Economics is the study of the material world. The material world is knowable and measurable. It may be complex, but even the most complex thing may be deconstructed and analyzed by science; there are no depths too deep and no skies too high for scientific analysis to pierce. Your "well that's unknowable!" is an absolutely pathetic quasireligious excuse to do nothing while other people keep working on the human mind - both in psychology and economics. It is no wonder that while behaviourists keep analyzing the human mind, biologists and psychologists investigate individual and collective phenomena deeper and further, only Austrians wash their hands and keep singing their old tune about "blissful ignorance".
This whole position is simply an ugly defence of your own lack of desire to do anything. Austrian "science" is the perfect do-nothing school.