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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.
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_xHistory.
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