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I would like to add to Jan Pieter Schulz's question. I have for some
time been
putting a similar question to historians of economic thought.
Specifically, I
ask:
I have had a long standing problem with Cambridge economists (for
me, starting with Joan R.) who criticize neoclassical economics by
asserting that neoclassical theory has an essential assumption of
perfect knowledge or perfect information. Since Alfred Marshall
explicitly denied such an assumption in his Book 6, do you have
any idea, as an historian of economic thought, where any (or the
first) proponent of neoclassical economics actually made such an
assumption?
My suspicion is that this is a can that has been tied to the tail of
neoclassical economics by the critics.
Lawrence A. Boland
Simon Fraser University
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