How to conduct inter-/multi-disciplinary research as an economist?
My economics dissertation, "The Economics of Moral Uncertainty," represents my triptych's third panel addressing moral uncertainty. This intricate choice-processing problem asks, "What should we do when uncertain about what we should do?"
I. The Phenomenology of Moral Uncertainty
The triptych's opening segment, "The Phenomenology of Moral Uncertainty," a manuscript resulting from my undergraduate and graduate endeavors at AMSE, LSE, and Sorbonne, draws upon the history of modern moral philosophy, philosophy of economics, and phenomenology. It examines the origins and characterizations of moral uncertainty, both as a conceptual construct and a lived human experience, offering hypotheses for its genesis and potential responses and emphasizing the seminal role of critical thinking.
The Phenomenology of Moral Uncertainty, by Antony Avram