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  1. On science as a free market.Allan Walstad - 2001 - Perspectives on Science 9 (3):324-340.
    : The question of whether science may usefully be viewed as a market process has recently been addressed by Mäki (1999), who concludes that "either free-market economics is self-defeating, or else there must be two different concepts of free market, one for the ordinary economy, the other for science." Here I argue that such pessimism is unwarranted. Mäki proposes (see also Wible 1998) that the conduct of economic research itself be taken, self-reflexively, as a test case for any suggested economics (...)
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  2.  98
    Time's arrow in an oscillating universe.Allan Walstad - 1980 - Foundations of Physics 10 (9-10):743-749.
    In view of the time-symmetric nature of the laws of physics, time asymmetry in the universe must arise from “initial” conditions. A fully time-symmetric oscillating model is presented which exists in a highly compressed, highly ordered state att=0 and evolves forward, in the thermodynamic sense, as ∣t ∣ increases. This model offers the possibility of accounting for several fundamental and puzzling aspects of our universe, including matter-antimatter asymmetry, the large entropy per baryon, primordial density enhancements sufficient to form galaxies, and (...)
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    Alisa Bokulich is an Assistant Professor in the Philosophy Department at Boston University. She received her Ph. D.(2001) in History and Philoso-phy of Science from the University of Notre Dame. Her primary area of re-search, within the philosophy of physics, is on the relationship between classical and quantum mechanics. [REVIEW]Allan Walstad - 2001 - Perspectives on Science 9 (3):324-340.
    . The question of whether science may usefully be viewed as a market process has recently been addressed by Mäki, who concludes that “either free-market economics is self-defeating, or else there must be two different concepts of free market, one for the ordinary economy, the other for science.” Here I argue that such pessimism is unwarranted.Mäki proposes that the conduct of economic research itself be taken, self-reflexively, as a test case for any suggested economics of science. While agreeing that we (...)
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    Book Reviews : The Economic Laws of Scientific Research Terence Kealey, St. Martin's Press, New York, 1996 ISBN: 0-312-17306-7, $19.95, 382 pages. [REVIEW]Allan Walstad - 1997 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 17 (4):215-216.
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