Should also point out that the family tree model used to be
fairly comnmon in history of economic thought, didn't it? I
know I can recall seeing one.
While it's kind of fun to try to do, here are two serious
problems with it:
1. You have to be careful that it doesn't automatically assign
a positivist interpretation to the process of intellectual
change over time -- that is, a leads to b,c,d, which then lead to
e,f,g,h,i,j -- etc. etc. --
That's why I believe these trees were very popular when
it really WAS thought that intellectual change was a linear
progression to better and better and better.
2. There are horizontal as well as vertical transformations --
generational, cohorts -- coauthors and THEIR advisors? colleagues
at your university? today, I'd add spouses (I know I've been
influenced by my own spouse's educational family tree).
And, in my field of economic history, I know of advisors with
a long life span who themselves changed rather dematically
sorry, dramatically) in the course of their careers. A graduate
student who had Doug North at the beginning of the career had
in some ways a very different advisor from the Doug North today.
A total family tree -- whew. too many lines crisscrossing. More
like a family bramblebush.
-- Mary Schweitzer, Dept. of History, Villanova University
(on leave 1995-96)
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