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Fred Lee wrote: 
 
<<Of course one could teach a sort of whiggish history of economic thought 
for the 20th century--and this would not be very different in style from 
the sort of whiggish pre-20th century history of thought generally taught 
(who would ever think of teaching Georgism or the German/English historical 
school or anarchism-Christain socialism in a history of economic thought 
course).>> 
 
For what it's worth, when I took HET at Michigan State with Warren Samuels, 
we studied multiple flavors of anarchism, German historical school, 
Aquinas, and Mercantilism among others.  This was along with the Smith, 
Ricardo, Marx etc. that you would expect.  A second course in the sequence, 
which I was unfortunately able to take, featured Marshall and Keynes, among 
others.  Although not taught by Samuels, I believe it also spent some time 
in a non-"whiggish" manner. 
 
Mike Robison 
 
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