Vilfredo Pareto: Beyond Disciplinary Boundaries ●
: It successfully paints Pareto as a "Renaissance man" who remained deeply pessimistic about human progress.
: Authors argue that Pareto was a "universal genius" whose work predates and influences modern functionalism, rational choice theory, and even contemporary risk analysis. Critical Perspective Vilfredo Pareto: Beyond Disciplinary Boundaries
, edited by Joseph V. Femia and Alasdair J. Marshall, is a scholarly collection that seeks to revive interest in the Italian polymath’s often-overlooked sociological and political theories. Rather than focusing solely on his well-known economic "Pareto efficiency," the book examines his later transition toward understanding "non-logical" human behavior and complex social systems. Core Themes and Key Arguments : It successfully paints Pareto as a "Renaissance
: The volume highlights Pareto’s disillusionment with formal economic theory (utility maximization), which led him to explore social actions driven by sentiment rather than logic. Femia and Alasdair J
Reviewers from the Economic History Society and Nordicum-Mediterraneum praise the book for its:
: The book offers a fresh look at the "circulation of elites," using his imagery of "lions" (those who use force) and "foxes" (those who use cunning) to analyze modern political and financial shifts.
: Several essays break down Pareto's framework of residui (underlying psychological drives) and derivazioni (the logical-sounding excuses humans use to justify those drives).