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A colleague has an interesting question to which I thought this
newsgroup might be able to respond:
Can anyone help me find out about the origin and development of the
current use of the term "incentive?"
It is used now as a noun roughly synonymous with "inducement" and
generally in a context where the incentive is thought to play a part in a
person's rational calculation of the course of action best suited to
advance
his interests.
It used to be used primarily as an adjective to describe something
which aroused strong feelings (the OED gives "Lord Shaftesbury made an
incentive speech in the House of Lords" as an example) - or when used as a
noun, it meant an incitement or provocation. That is - the word used to
carry connotations associated with especially passionate and irrational
motivations to action.
I am interested in (1)when "incentive" became a common term in
economic discourse in particular and (2)the shift in association from the
passions to rationality; or perhaps more accurately, the end of the
importance of the distinction between appeals to rationality and appeals to
the passions (contemporary conceptions of "incentives" and "preferences"
etc. tend to collapse that distinction).
... any clues???
Please reply to [log in to unmask]
Craufurd D. Goodwin
Department of Economics, Duke University
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
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