The
paper analyses the underlying 'philosophical
underpinnings' of Sraffa's 'Production
of Commodities by Means of Commodities',
an aspect that has hitherto received very
little intellectual discussion. The author
argues that the rejection of the concept
of 'mechanical causality' on which foundations
of orthodox theory depend heavily, is
the philosophical cornerstone of Sraffa'
book. In other words, Sraffa sought to
establish that a change in methods of
production or techniques of production
leaves economic theory with no standard
of measurement with which economic variables
could be compared. This makes very vulnerable
theories like that proffered by the neoclassical
school since it depends heavily on causal
functional relationships between, for
example, prices and choice of techniques.
*Ajit Sinha is associated
with the Gokhale Institute of Economics
and Politics at Pune, India.
August 19, 2002.
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