Did a feedback mechanism between propositional and prescriptive knowledge create modern growth?

19 Dec 2025·
Julius Koschnick
Julius Koschnick
· 0 min read
J.M.W. Turner - Dudley (1832)
Abstract
What was the origin of modern economic growth? Joel Mokyr has argued that self sustained modern economic growth originated from a feedback loop between propositional (theoretical) and prescriptive (applied) knowledge, which turned positive in the eighteenth century during the “Industrial Enlightenment”. While influential, this thesis has never been directly tested. This paper provides the first quantitative evidence by estimating the impact of knowledge spillovers between propositional and prescriptive knowledge on innovation in England, 1600–1800. For this, it introduces two new text-based measures for 1) the innovativeness of publications and 2) knowledge spillovers. The paper finds strong evidence that a feedback loop between propositional and prescriptive knowledge became positive during the second half of the eighteenth century. It also documents that this process had positive effects on the real economy as measured through patents. Overall, the findings provide empirical support for Mokyr’s original hypothesis.
Julius Koschnick
Authors
Assistant Professor

I am an Assistant Professor and Marie Curie Fellow at the Department of Economics at the University of Southern Denmark (SDU), part of the Danish Institute for Advanced Study (DIAS) and the Historical Economics and Development Group (HEDG).

My research interests include long-run growth, human capital formation, knowledge transmission, and natural language processing.