FWIW I think many of these sociopolitical ideas have been absorbed into mainstream academic economics already e.g.
work on national identity/culture/social trust being very important for growth and cooperation
work on game theory on credible commitments and their variations in repeated games
meta-rationality/rational inattention on sometimes computing how valuable something is might not itself be rational.
I think it would be more precise to say this against classical or 1960s econ ideas.
FWIW I think many of these sociopolitical ideas have been absorbed into mainstream academic economics already e.g.
work on national identity/culture/social trust being very important for growth and cooperation
work on game theory on credible commitments and their variations in repeated games
meta-rationality/rational inattention on sometimes computing how valuable something is might not itself be rational.
I think it would be more precise to say this against classical or 1960s econ ideas.