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Date: | Mon, 17 Dec 2012 16:21:55 +0000 |
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A couple of years ago, I organized a creativity workshop for a group of graduate students, and had some excellent discussions with them. I covered history of thought; Ed Leamer covered creativity in econometrics, and Herb Gintis covered creativity in theory. Avinash Dixit and John Siegfried covered general creativity issues. It was a useful workshop, and the students recognized that they were not getting any useful instruction in the history of thought. They asked me to suggest a general reading list that all economics students should have read, which I didn't have right off the bat, but I thought would be useful. So now, with your help, I will try to develop one.
So my question is: If one had to list, say, 20 articles or chapters in books that all economists should definitely have read, what would be on that list? My plan is to post this list on my website and to possiblly take out an ad in the 2014 Program guide providing my suggestions for the top 10 to graduate students, and picking on the professioin for not doing its job in training graduate students to have perspective on issues that a study of past literature provides. So my question: What suggestions would people have for me of "must reads"?
Thanks,
Dave
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