000 | 05267cam a2200337 i 4500 | ||
---|---|---|---|
005 | 20211129174528.0 | ||
008 | 020226s2002 njua b 001 0 eng d | ||
011 | _aBIB MATCHES WORLDCAT | ||
020 | _a0691096260 | ||
020 | _a9780691096261 | ||
035 | _a(OCoLC)49198341 | ||
040 |
_aOCoLC _beng _erda _dATU |
||
050 | 4 |
_aHB75. _bB33 2002 |
|
082 | 0 | _a330.09 | |
100 | 1 |
_aBackhouse, Roger, _d1951- _eauthor. _9234425 |
|
245 | 1 | 4 |
_aThe ordinary business of life : _ba history of economics from the ancient world to the twenty-first century / _cRoger E. Backhouse. |
264 | 1 |
_aPrinceton : _bPrinceton University Press, _c[2002] |
|
264 | 4 | _c©2002 | |
300 |
_aix, 368 pages : _billustrations ; _c23 cm |
||
336 |
_atext _btxt _2rdacontent |
||
337 |
_aunmediated _bn _2rdamedia |
||
338 |
_avolume _bnc _2rdacarrier |
||
504 | _aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 329-352) and index. | ||
505 | 0 | 0 |
_g1. _tThe Ancient World. _tHomer and Hesiod. _tEstate Management - Xenophon's Oikonomikos. _tPlato's Ideal State. _tAristotle on Justice and Exchange. _tAristotle and the Acquisition of Wealth. _tRome -- _g2. _tThe Middle Ages. _tThe Decline of Rome. _tJudaism. _tEarly Christianity. _tIslam. _tFrom Charles Martel to the Black Death. _tThe Twelfth-Century Renaissance and Economics in the Universities. _tNicole Oresme and the Theory of Money -- _g3. _tThe Emergence of the Modern World View - the Sixteenth Century. _tThe Renaissance and the Emergence of Modern Science. _tThe Reformation. _tThe Rise of the European Nation State. _tMercantilism. _tMachiavelli. _tThe School of Salamanca and American Treasure. _tEngland under the Tudors. _tEconomics in the Sixteenth Century -- _g4. _tScience, Politics and Trade in Seventeenth-Century England. _tBackground. _tScience and the Scientists of the Royal Society. _tPolitical Ferment. _tEconomic Problems - Dutch Commercial Power and the Crisis of the 1620s. _tThe Balance-of-Trade Doctrine. _tThe Rate of Interest and the Case for Free Trade. _tThe Recoinage Crisis of the 1690s. _tEconomics in Seventeenth-Century England -- _g5. _tAbsolutism and Enlightenment in Eighteenth-Century France. _tProblems of the Absolute State. _tEarly-Eighteenth-Century Critics of Mercantilism. _tCantillon on the Nature of Commerce in General. _tThe Enlightenment. _tPhysiocracy. _tTurgot. _tEconomic Thought under the Ancien Regime -- _g6. _tThe Scottish Enlightenment of the Eighteenth Century. _tBackground. _tHutcheson. _tHume. _tSir James Steuart. _tAdam Smith. _tDivision of Labour and the Market. _tCapital Accumulation. _tSmith and Laissez-Faire. _tEconomic Thought at the End of the Eighteenth Century -- _g7. _tClassical Political Economy, 1790-1870. _tFrom Moral Philosophy to Political Economy. _tUtilitarianism and the Philosophic Radicals. _tRicardian Economics. _tAlternatives to Ricardian Economics. _tGovernment Policy and the Role of the State. _tMoney. _tJohn Stuart Mill. _tKarl Marx -- _g8. _tThe Split between History and Theory in Europe, 1870-1914. _tThe Professionalization of Economics. _tJevons, Walras and Mathematical Economics. _tEconomics in Germany and Austria. _tHistorical Economics and the Marshallian School in Britain. _tEuropean Economic Theory, 1900-1914 -- _g9. _tThe Rise of American Economics, 1870-1939. _tUS Economics in the Late Nineteenth Century. _tJohn Bates Clark. _tMathematical Economics. _tThorstein Veblen. _tJohn R. Commons. _tInter-War Pluralism. _tInter-War Studies of Competition. _tThe Migration of European Academics. _tUS Economics in the Mid Twentieth Century -- _g10. _tMoney and the Business Cycle, 1898-1939. _tWicksell's Cumulative Process. _tThe Changed Economic Environment. _tAustrian and Swedish Theories of the Business Cycle. _tBritain: From Marshall to Keynes. _tThe American Tradition. _tKeynes's General Theory. _tThe Keynesian Revolution. _tThe Transition from Inter-War to Post-Second World War Macroeconomics -- _g11. _tEconometrics and Mathematical Economics, 1930 to the Present. _tThe Mathematization of Economics. _tThe Revolution in National-Income Accounting. _tThe Econometric Society and the Origins of Modern Econometrics. _tFrisch, Tinbergen and the Cowles Commission. _tThe Second World War. _tGeneral-Equilibrium Theory. _tGame Theory. _tThe Mathematization of Economics (Again) -- _g12. _tWelfare Economics and Socialism, 1870 to the Present. _tSocialism and Marginalism. _tThe State and Social Welfare. _tThe Lausanne School. _tThe Socialist-Calculation Debate. _tWelfare Economics, 1930-1960. _tMarket Failure and Government Failure -- _g13. _tEconomists and Policy, 1939 to the Present. _tThe Expanding Role of the Economics Profession. _tKeynesian Economics and Macroeconomic Planning. _tInflation and Monetarism. _tThe New Classical Macroeconomics. _tDevelopment Economics -- _g14. _tExpanding the Discipline, 1960 to the Present. _tApplied Economics. _tEconomic Imperialism. _tHeterodox Economics. _tNew Concepts and New Techniques. _tEconomics in the Twentieth Century. _tEpilogue: Economists and Their History. |
588 | _aMachine converted from AACR2 source record. | ||
650 | 0 |
_aEconomics _xHistory. _9316967 |
|
907 |
_a.b10027439 _b11-07-17 _c27-10-15 |
||
942 | _cB | ||
945 |
_a330.09 BAC _g1 _iA256055B _j0 _lcmain _o- _p$69.78 _q- _r- _s- _t0 _u8 _v0 _w0 _x0 _y.i10096760 _z28-10-15 |
||
998 |
_ab _ac _b06-04-16 _cm _da _feng _gnju _h4 |
||
999 |
_c1101230 _d1101230 |