Dealing with the Duhem-Quine thesis in financial economics: can causal holism help? |
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Authors: | McGovern Siobhain |
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Affiliation: | * Dublin City University, Ireland |
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Abstract: | Acceptance of the DuhemQuine thesis implies a recognitionthat empirical tests of individual hypotheses are in fact testsof individual hypotheses in conjunction with the networks fromwhich those hypotheses are derived. This leads to a problemin the evaluation of disconfirming evidence: is it the individualhypothesis or the network that is refuted? This paper examineshow financial economists deal with this joint-testingproblem in their empirical evaluation of the efficient marketshypothesis. Causal holists argue that the holistic testing theyespouse circumvents the difficulties surrounding joint-testingproblems. This paper assesses whether a causal holist approachcan resolve the ambiguity surrounding the evidence against theefficient markets hypothesis. It concludes that, without a resolutionof the ontologicalepistemological tension in causal holismidentified by Fleetwood (Cambridge Journal of Economics, 2002,vol. 26, 2745) and a clearer outline of the nature ofholistic testing, causal holism cannot help financial economistsdeal with the implications of the DuhemQuine thesis forempirical testing. |
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Keywords: | Causal Holism Duhem Quine thesis Efficient markets hypothesis |
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