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This is why politics, economics, and history should not be studied independently. It’s why Marx’s critique of classical political economy was that it lacked historical specificity. If economic laws are investigated in the same way as natural laws of physics or biology, then they will appear natural and unchangeable. But economies do change over time, they aren’t eternal and therefore can only be accurately understood in historical context, as transient laws of the current time and place.
Even in disciplines like physics, it is known that one simple set of rules can not be extrapolated to explain all circumstances. The study of aerodynamics separates mechanics into several 'regimes,' because things behave quite differently under subsonic and supersonic conditions. A similar dichotomy exists between traditional Newtonian mechanics and relativity. If the market oracles getting spit out by the Chicago School are treating economics like physics, they are the type of physicist who still upholds the plum pudding model.
It’s worse than that, even. The plum pudding model IIRC was always understood to be an approximation.
Vulgar economy is less forgivable. It is essentially anti-scientific, by rejecting the possibility of economic laws which are not identical with appearances. The vulgar economists are like astronomers still clinging to the Ptolemaic system (geocentric model), because the sky in fact appears to rotate about the earth. Marx here plays the role of Galileo, using science to prove that there are deeper laws governing the motions of celestial objects.