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[The following announcement was read by Dan Hammond at the History of
Economics Society meeting, July 2003]
Citation of Denis Patrick O'Brien
2003 Distinguished Fellow
History of Economics Society
July 6, 2003
The 2003 Distinguished Fellow of the History of Economics Society is
Professor Denis Patrick O'Brien.
Denis O'Brien is a colleague and friend a number of you, and has been a
teacher of others. Yet I am sure there are some in attendance tonight who
have never met him. Especially for those of us who are not from Britain
the opportunities to meet him are few, because Professor O'Brien is not an
enthusiastic traveler or conferee. Indeed, we were unable to persuade him
to cross the Atlantic from Durham, U.K. to Durham, U.S.A. to receive this
award in person. Professor O'Brien is also not given to self-promotion. So
even his scholarship is not as well known as it deserves to be. Perhaps
this Distinguished Fellowship will be a corrective. For Denis O'Brien's
scholarship is superb. His essays and books are a treat for the mind and
spirit.
Denis O'Brien began his career as an industrial economist, and his first
publication was a piece in the Journal of Industrial Economics on patent
protection in textiles. This was in 1964, shortly after he took a position
as probationary lecturer at Queen's University, Belfast. O'Brien shortly
thereafter began his doctoral thesis on the work of J. R. McCulloch, under
the direction of R.D. Collison Black. His book, J. R. McCulloch, A Study in
Classical Economics, was published in 1970. Of this work, a doctoral thesis
I remind you, Donald Winch said:
"This is the first full-length study of John Ramsay McCulloch=92s life and
writings. Such is the thoroughness and finesse with which Dr. O'Brien has
carried out his task that it can be said with some confidence that it will
probably be the last. Some idea of the magnitude of the task can be gained
from the fourteen pages needed to list McCulloch's writings."
While searching for materials on McCulloch, O'Brien discovered the papers
of Lord Overstone, which at the time were assumed to be lost. He edited the
Overstone papers, and published them in three volumes from Cambridge
University Press in 1971.
In his books and articles Denis O'Brien has covered the entire waterfront
of classical economics, writing on the lives and ideas of figures such as
Thomas Joplin, Sir James Steuart, Mountiford Longfield, Robert Torrins,
Henry Thornton, Richard Cantillon, as well as Smith and Ricardo. Of his
1975 textbook, The Classical Economists, Mark Blaug wrote:
"In short, from now on all histories of economic thought can start their
story in 1870, because it is difficult to see how anyone can improve on
Professor O'Brien's analysis of the century that preceded it."
It may be that Blaug will soon be demonstrated wrong in this judgment, for
Princeton University Press will publish a new edition of The Classical
Economists next year. A reviewer of the new manuscript wrote:
"O'Brien has done a masterful job of creating a second edition that is an
important new contribution to scholarship. ... It is my considered opinion
that The Classical Economists is the definitive work on classical economics
no other piece of scholarship is even remotely close to being its peer.
This perception has only been solidified in this new edition."
The reviewer also comments on Denis O'Brien:
"He is his own man, with his own opinions, but he is also extremely
catholic in his recognition of what constitutes good scholarship. This is
of immense benefit to the book, as the literature on classical economics
has been written from such an incredible diversity of perspectives, many
(if not most) of which have something important to add to the
conversation."
O'Brien's attention has not been restricted to the classical period. He has
a full-length book on Lionel Robbins, and articles on Hayek, Marshall,
Edwin Cannan, Edgeworth, Frank Knight, Harry Johnson, Ragnar Frisch, James
Meade and a number other economists. Nor has his work been restricted to
individual economists. He edited an eight-volume History of Taxation for
Pickering and Chatto and a three-volume set on The Foundations of Business
Cycle Theory for Edward Elgar.
He has also written prolifically and provocatively on methodology, urging
economists to take care with and to make use of facts. Decrying economists'
tendency to "play with models," O'Brien has been an effective advocate for
a methodological approach that he identifies as "essentially the 18th
century Scottish method," but one that also draws heavily on Alfred
Marshall. I quote from O'Brien's inaugural lecture at Durham University:
"What has really happened is that we have taken the fairly good ground
floor of economic theory and built upon it a house of cards, or rather
Tower of Babel. The basic framework of the ground floor is good. But
instead of trying to fill in the framework with bricks, mortar and
concrete, we carry on erecting scaffolding above. ... The original Tower of
Babel was, I understand, built to make its occupants self-sufficient,
perhaps to guard them against a second Flood; and our Tower has been built
to provide its occupants with protection against getting wet through
contact with the world."
Denis O'Brien's contributions to the history and methodology of economics
are marked by his conviction that economics and its history are of
practical importance; they are marked by his determination to find facts
and use them; by his bountiful intellectual energy, broad and deep
knowledge of contemporary economic theory; and by his wonderful wit, and
clear and compelling writing style.
We are pleased to add Denis Patrick O'Brien to the roster of Distinguished
Fellows of the History of Economics Society. Malcolm Rutherford will accept
the award for Professor O'Brien.
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