Description
This book explores implications of the modern view of central banks rising from the proposition that words have no meaning beyond their use in a particular context and setting. It studies coded language to explain why a central bank’s decisions and communicative interactions can’t be devoted to a coded language which is an artificial language. ELKE MUCHLINSKI, Economist and Philosopher, has held teaching positions at the Free University of Berlin, the University of Halle (2010-2011), University of Trier (2009) and University of Hamburg (summer term 2008).