A central debate in the philosophy of science concerns the purpose of scientific theories: should they aim to represent the world as accurately as possible or is it sufficient for them to produce useful predictions? Milton Friedman’s influential essay The Methodology of Positive Economics argues for the latter, suggesting that the primary goal of a theory is to generate accurate predictions, regardless of whether its assumptions reflect reality. This instrumentalist-empiricist view has had a profound impact on economics, encouraging the development of models that may not be true in their assumptions, but are judged primarily on their predictive success.
However, this approach risks reducing economics to a mere “black box” tool for prediction, devoid of genuine insight into the underlying mechanisms that drive economic phenomena. From the perspective of scientific realism, which holds that a theory should aim to represent the world as accurately as possible, Friedman’s instrumentalism-empiricism neglects the deeper task of understanding the economy’s workings.
The insight comes from realizing that it is humans that act, not homo economicus and not a set of mathematical equations. Economics is not a physical scientist, it is a social science and should be treated as such.