====================== HES POSTING =================== Following this posting you will receive the eighth of the "monthly" guest editorials for HES. It will be posted by J. Daniel Hammond from Wake Forest University and discusses "Taxonomy in History of Economics." The HES editors encourage you to respond to the issues that are discussed in the editorial. You can post a response by replying to the message (just check to make sure that the address to which you are sending the message is [log in to unmask]) or by sending a new message to [log in to unmask] If your message bears the same heading as the editorial (or has the addition "Re:"), it will be archived with the other responses (once we've ironed out some archiving problems). We hope the discussion of this editorial will be as lively as those that followed the other editorials. The editorial, the conversation emerging from it, and other relevant links will be posted to the HES Web site at: http://www.eh.net/~HisEcSoc/Resources/Editorials/Hammond/ (Or, start at the HES home-page http://www.eh.net/~HisEcSoc/, click on "Other Resources," then click on "Monthly Guest Editorials for HES," and finally click on "Editorial J. Daniel Hammond".) The editorial and subsequent responses may be forwarded to other lists and/or used in classroom settings without requesting permission. For publication purposes, however, the author of each message (the editorial or any responses) used must be contacted for permission. For more information about copyright holdings for HES postings, please see the information message you can receive when you send the message INFO HES to [log in to unmask] Sincerely, Ross B. Emmett HES co-editor ============ FOOTER TO HES POSTING ============ For information, send the message "info HES" to [log in to unmask]