Student and teacher of economics. I received my master's degree in economics in Canada under a leading New-Keynesian professor. Although much of my personal reading is in the history of economic thought, which has bred within me a mild skepticism of the Keynesian paradigm/epistemology. I will not, however, come anywhere near to dying on that hill.

I hope my contributions come across as historically informed and unbiased. I mostly contribute to pages that I wish had been more fruitful when I first visited them years ago while learning about these ideas. I aim to make some topics more accessible and informative for future students who may find niche Wikipedia pages otherwise empty and uninviting.

Additionally, I seek to provide modern context and contemporary mainstream academic perspectives on various ideas. When I first encountered them, these ideas seemed so far outside the current paradigm that it was difficult to understand their place in relation to contemporary science. I hope that now I am grounded well within mainstream economics I can shine an unbiased light on some of my favourite heterodox thinkers.