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Fri, 15 Nov 2013 05:58:02 -0500 |
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[log in to unmask] wrote:
>It was with much amusement that I read Michael Ambrosi's comments.
>Amusement because I remain puzzled as to why some historians of economic
>thought can't seem to shed their Keynesian beliefs in the face of
>analysis clearly contradicting them.
Many apologies for straying rather, but perhaps others might also find the
below an amusing approach to the general problem cited here?
Rob Tye
(From: ARGUMENT, PERSUASION, AND ANECDOTE: The Usefulness of History to
Understanding Conflict (James J. Sadkovich))
(Sadkovich is a historian specialsing in the Bosnian conflict)
I would like to begin by quoting Bill James, who has challenged the way we
think about baseball, a game of intuition and individual effort whose fans
and managers are obsessed with team performance and statistical analysis.
"When I was young and naive," he recently told Tyler Kepner "I assumed that
when you demonstrated that something was false, everybody would say, 'Oh, I
didn't know that,' and stop doing what it was that had been demonstrated as
being useless or counterproductive. "Of course," he continued, "the world
doesn't work like that."
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