================= HES POSTING ======================= [This message was originally sent to HES in December, following the postings on this topic. There were technical problems at Eh.Net that day, and I forgot to post the message later. So here it is, about a month late. Mea cupla! The archived response to this thread by Jonathon Glickstein does answer this inquiry, in part. -- RBE] I want to thank Ross and David Levy for this very interesting and surprising, to me at least, response. Can I ask some of the obvious next questions: when did the phrase, the "dismal science" get connected to Malthus, or did it? Is this a latter day invention? Did Carlyle ever link the "dismal science" to Malthus in another context than the "black science"? And, when did it become common to refer to economics as the dismal science in reference to the Malthusian population principle? Steve ============ FOOTER TO HES POSTING ============ For information, send the message "info HES" to [log in to unmask]