WORK
The Gifts of Athena
Mokyr's 2002 treatise establishing the distinction between propositional and prescriptive knowledge and arguing that the channels connecting the two are the primary drivers of sustained economic growth.
The Gifts of Athena: Historical Origins of the Knowledge Economy (Princeton University Press, 2002) is the book in which Joel Mokyr articulated the theoretical framework that would anchor his subsequent career. The title refers to Athena as the goddess of both wisdom and useful craft — a dual patronage that Mokyr used to frame the central argument of the book: that the distinction
between understanding (
propositional knowledge) and doing (prescriptive knowledge) is the analytical key to understanding how knowledge economies emerge and sustain growth. The book synthesized three centuries of technological and economic history to demonstrate that the institutional channels connecting the two types of knowledge — not the stock of either — determine which societies achieve sustained prosperity.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The book built on Mokyr's earlier The Lever of Riches (1990), which had surveyed the history of invention but lacked a unifying theoretical framework. The Gifts of Athena provided the framework. It traced how societies