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Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:18:26 2006 |
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==================== HES POSTING ====================
[Here is David Levy's response. The key is that classical economists were
"dismal" (=black) because they supported black emancipation, which Carlyle
opposed. -- RBE]
"Dismal science" was used by Carlyle in a Dec 1849 article
in *Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country* called "Occasional
Discourse on the Negro Question." It was answered in the
next issue (Jan 50) by J S Mill. Carlyle responded to economists
in general in the 1st of the *Latter-Day Pamphlets*, the Feb 1850
*Present Time*. The *Fraser's* article was expanded and republished
with the title *Occasional Discourse on the Nigger Question*
in 1853.
The pamphlet was included in the Collected Works with the
information that *it* had been in *Fraser's* in 1849.
Thus, the OED has the date/place right with the title wrong
because the OED reading program focused on books not periodicals.
Other authorities give the origin as the *Present Time* because
it is earlier than the *Nigger Question*.
Stephan Darwall in conversation has parsed the "dismal science"
as the "black science." Reading Carlyle will convince you
that this is a brilliant parsing. There is nothing about
Malthus in any of these Carlyle pieces. Which raises the
obvious question ...
If anyone is really interested I can provide either of two
papers on the topic:
1. How the dismal science got its name: debating racial quacks
2. Economic texts as apocrypha
The former is currently in tighter shape than the latter. They
can come in hard copy by snail-mail or in Word Perfect for
Windows form by e-mail.
David
David M. Levy
Center for Study of Public Choice
George Mason University
Fairfax VA 22030
703-993-2319 (fax) 703-993-2323
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