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Fri, 18 Dec 2009 17:43:31 -0500 |
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Paul Samuelson Papers Coming to Duke
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The papers of preeminent American economist Paul A. Samuelson
(1914-2009) will be added to the Economists Papers Project in the
Rare Book, Manuscript and Special Collections Library at Duke.
Samuelson was the first American recipient of the Nobel Memorial
Prize in economics. Prior to his death on 13 December, Samuelson had
made the decision to donate his papers to Duke where they will join
the collections of his MIT Nobel Prize-winning colleagues Robert
Solow and Franco Modigliani, as well as those of Nobelists Kenneth
Arrow, Lawrence Klein (Samuelson's first Ph.D student), Douglass
North, Vernon Smith, and Leonid Hurwicz. The Economists Papers
Project, developed jointly by Duke's History of Economics group and
the Special Collections Library, is the most significant archival
collection of economists' papers in the world.
Samuelson was the singular force leading to the post WWII
reconceptualization of economics as a scientific discipline. His
"neoclassical synthesis" wedded modern microeconomics to Keynesian
macroeconomics, both of which were stabilized through his landmark
Foundations of Economic Analysis (1947). His Principles of Economics
textbook grounded the vocabulary, and teaching practices, of the
economics profession in the second half of the twentieth century, and
his career at MIT made that economics department the world leader in
scientific economics.
Descriptions of the Economists' Papers at Duke are available at
<http://library.duke.edu/specialcollections/collections/economists/collections.html>http://library.duke.edu/specialcollections/collections/economists/collections.html.
The Paul Samuelson Papers will be transferred to Duke in stages over
the next several months. Those interested in conducting research in
the Samuelson Papers when they are made available should contact Will
Hansen (<mailto:[log in to unmask]>[log in to unmask]) for
further information.
E. Roy Weintraub
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