I’ve noticed some users here have mentioned the work of Paul Cockshott and I’m interested in looking into the computational aspects of planning.

I already know a bit about operations research, but couldn’t find a good introductory paper about modern economic planning theories, specially since stuff like Google Scholar ranks by citations.

I’m currently reading “Towards a New Socialism” but it doesn’t look like it’ll delve too deeply into algorithms as far as I’ve got. Should I drop it and look into “Classical Econophysics” first? Or does anybody know a more technical book that I should look into?

  • Makan ☭ CPUSA
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    3 months ago

    It doesn’t seem that way to me. It seems that they’re knowledgeable when it comes to the discipline but that’s not saying much; a lot of other people are.