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Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:19:12 2006 |
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=================== HES POSTING =====================
I think you might find some really interesting influences in Alexander
Hamilton. Isaac, Asher _International Trade Tariffs and Commercial Policy
_, Irwin 1948 was a standard text way back when and states p 150, "In his
analysis, Hamilton practically repeats the basic arguments used by Adam
Smith in His WON. More than that, the language and expressions used by the
two men are very much alike....." But you get the drift, as he notes
agreements and disagreements with Smith in the Report on Manufactures.
There was also a New England preacher of the time that a Pol Sc
professor indicated had strong Smithian roots, but I don't remember his name.
The area is certainly one that is underdeveloped.
Good luck.
PAUL HEISE
PAUL A. HEISE, Ph.D. "The ideas of economists and political
Associate Professor of Economics philosophers both when they are right
Political Science and Economics Dept and when they are wrong, are more
powerful
Lebanon Valley College than is commonly understood. Indeed, the
Annville, PA 17003 world is ruled by little else. Practical men,
(717) 867-5644 who believe themselves to be quite exempt
[log in to unmask] from any intellectual influences, are usually
the slave of some defunct economist."
John Maynard Lord Keynes
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