Contents |

IMPORTANT FIGURES IN THE ECONOMIC ASPECTS OF COMPLEXITY

Peter Allen, Director of the International Ecotechnology Research Centre at Cranford
University- self organizing systems, evolutionary economics

Kenneth Arrow , John Kenney Professor of Economics and Professor of Operations Research,
Department of Economics Stanford University,

W. Brian Arthur, , Morrison Professor of Population Studies and Economics. Department of
Economics, Stanford University, positive feedback, economies of scale, bounded rationality.

Robert Axelrod, University of Michigan

William K. Barnett, Department of Economics, University of Texas at Austin - empirical tests
for chaos

William J. Baumol

J. Benhabib

Michele Boldrin, Department of Economics, University of California at Los Angeles, chaos and
growth theory

Horace Woody Brock, President, Strategic Economic Decisions, Inc. Menlo Park, California

Kenneth Boulding (died 1993) Professor of Economics, Emeritus, University of Colorado,
Boulder, evolutionary Economics

James Bullard, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Nonlinear dynamics

Miltiades Chacholiades, Georgia State University, Increasing returns and foreign trade theory

J. Conlisk

Paul A. David, William Robertson Coe Professor of American Economic History, Stanford
University, path dependence, innovation

Richard H. Day, Professor, Modelling Research Group, Department of Economics, University
of Southern California, non-linear dynamics bounded rationality, evolutionary economics.

Steven Durlauf, Department of Economics, Stanford University, path dependence

John Geweke. Department of Economics, Duke University, nonlinear econometric modeling

R. M. Goodwin. Emeritus Professor of Economics, University of Sienna, Italy. Nonlinear
economic dynamics and cycle models

Jeam-Michel Grandmont. CEPREMAP, Paris, France, nonlinear dynamics

John C. Harsyani, Flood Research Professor of Business Administration and Professor of
Economics, University of California at Berkely, game theory, decision theory.

Elias L. Khalil, University of Chicago, formerly Assistant Professor of Economics at Ohio State
University, evolutionary economics

Paul Krugman

J. L. Lemoine

Philip Mirowski, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana, mathematical economics

Richard R. Nelson, George Blumenthal Professor of International and Public Affairs, Business
and Law at Columbia University, evolutionary economic theory

Nathan Rosenberg

Paul Romer, Department of Economics, University of Chicago - Growth Theory

Barkley K. Rosser, James Madison University, non-linear dynamics

Tom Schelling

Joseph A. Schumpeter

Jose A. Sheinkman. Department of Economics, University of Chicago, nonlinear dynamics and
empirical tests for chaos

K. Shell

Herbert Simon

Sidney G. Winter, University of Michigan, Evolutionary Economics

Martin L. Weitzman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Increasing returns and
unemployment theory. (Harvard University in 1994)


Ulrich Witt, Faculty of Economics, University of Freiberg, Germany, Evolutionary Economics

Michael Woodford, Graduate School of Business, University of Chicago - complex
dynamics.