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Date: | Wed Apr 2 17:45:57 2008 |
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Dears,
Well, as Roy says, we are off to the races. My 2-cents worth is to note
that real creativity comes from real conversation. (One can make the
same point about economic creativity itself, and argue that it's the
language-using of humans---not "information"---that makes for new ideas
in talk.). That's why I couldn't get much out of Randall Collins'
astounding opus on philosophical schools. It seemed like a massive
diagram of "influence," a subway map of students, which is not I think
such a grand idea in intellectual sociology, especially for really
creative conversations, as against epigones gathered at the foot of The
Master.
Look at the Scottish Enlightenment. Or Malthus-Ricardo correspondence.
Or Cambridge (Eng.) in the 1930s. Or Chicago in the 1970s.
Regards,
Deirdre McCloskey
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