Epistemologically, observations are taken to be theory-laden, and thus cannot
be used as an independent measure of a theory’s validity. By the same token,
Aristotelian (mathematically deductive) logic is too narrow a framework for
theory construction, as it cannot encompass dialectical mechanisms or differ-
ence. Whereas geographical economists seek to use their insights to offer policy
advice so that capitalism’s stakeholders can reduce the negative effects of market
failure, economic geographers, while also offering short-term policy advice, in
addition envision alternative economic systems with more emancipatory poten-
tial, and seek to work with marginalized members of civil society to realize such
alternatives on the ground.
These differences have resulted in widespread mutual criticism. Thus economic
geographers dismiss geographical economics, and often Economics in general, as
overly simplistic, as pro-market, and as far too narrow – as reducing everything
to economic processes. Thus Amin and Thrift (2000: 5) argue that economic
geographers should ‘abandon mainstream “formal” economics and take up with
those pursuing economic knowledges outside economics’. Geographical econo-
mists argue that economic geographers are too negative about capitalism, lack
rigor in their theoretical and empirical research, and should leave the big theo-
retical issues to Economics. Thus Overman (2004: 513) suggests that geogra-
phers most useful role in the division of economic geography scholarship is to
contribute ‘[g]ood, careful case studies’.
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