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Date: | Wed, 13 Mar 2013 09:40:15 -0400 |
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Dear SHOE list,
I recently received this question from a colleague. If anyone has any
thoughts, you may respond to me either on or off list, and I will
forward to the person who asked.
Bruce
***
I have a quick question for you: do you know of recent economists,
economic journalists, or historians of economics who link the figure of
William Godwin to advocacy of markets as mechanisms that can overcome
apparent limits to growth? David Warsh does this, for example, in his
recent _Knowledge and the Wealth of Nations_, and Godwin also plays an
important (though different) role in Thomas Sowell's _A Conflict of
Visions: Ideological Origins of Political Struggles_. I'm wondering if
these are isolated examples, or if Godwin has in fact become an
important point of reference in the last decade or so, at least with
circles of people interested in economics?
--
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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