Oh my God, do I really have to be dragged into this discussion! I agree
with Mario on this line...
But for the record: I no longer have the 1999 e-mail referenced in the
paper that Alan Issac linked. (That paper by the way ultimately appeared
in a 2006 conference volume, Karl Popper: A Centenary Assessment, vol.
1. Edited by I. Jarvie, K. Milford, and D. Miller. Ashgate.)
I moved from UNC-Greensboro to Duke in 2008, and if I had saved the
e-mail while I was there, which I doubt, I certainly do not have access
to it now.
Bruce
On 5/14/2014 2:45 PM, Alan G Isaac wrote:
> As far as I know the Shenoy quote is second hand, but it is from
> a good source: http://www.unites.uqam.ca/philo/pdf/Caldwell_2003-01.pdf
> Assuming the accuracy of the Shenoy quote (from an email, as reported by
> Caldwell) and of the Burrows quote (from a 2012 email reported by Leeson)
> -- and I assume both are accurate -- one suspects that having the entire
> email received by Caldwell would prove illuminating. The actual quotes
> offered so far are not in logical contradiction, but to reconcile them
> would seem to require that the analysis was hers rather than any by
> the CLLC, as Burrows and Antonia report that as far as they are aware,
> no CLLC analysis was performed.
>
> Alan Isaac
>
>
>
> On 5/14/2014 1:33 PM, Samuel Bostaph wrote:
>> I would be appreciative of Robert Leeson giving complete citations
>> for his alleged Hayek and Shenoy quotations.
--
Bruce Caldwell
Research Professor of Economics
Director, Center for the History of Political Economy
"To discover a reference has often taken hours of labour, to fail to discover one has often taken days." Edwin Cannan, on editing Smith's Wealth of Nations
Address:
Department of Economics
Duke University
Box 90097
Durham, N.C. 27708
Office: Room 07G Social Sciences Building
Phone: 919-660-6896
Center website: http://hope.econ.duke.edu
Personal Website: http://econ.duke.edu/~bjc18/
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