Provides a comprehensive and analytical overview of the development of economic theory from its beginnings, at the end of the Middle Ages, up to contemporary contributions. Traditional theories are presented as living matter and modern theories as part of a historical process and not as established truths. In this way, the book avoids the dangerous dichotomy between the ‘pure’ historians of thought, who dedicate themselves exclusively to studying ‘facts’, and the ‘pure’ theorists, who are interested only in the evolution of the logical structure of theories. An unconventionally large amount of space is reserved for the thought of the last 50 years of the twentieth century, for more than 50% of scientific knowledge has been produced in this time span. The book is not directed to a specialist public nor solely to a student audience. It aims to reach the educated person who has an interest in understanding the context in which economic ideas were formed.
No. 9. AMERICAN PROGRESS IN JURISPRUDENCE.* * This paper, prepared by the late David Dudley Field for the World's Congress of Jurisprudence and Law Reform, held at Chicago, in August, 1893, is one of the series which THE AMERICAN LAW R EGISTER AND Rzvi w has been given the right to publish.-D.
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