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A History of Economic Reasoning
1983
by
Karl Pribram
Knowledge Economics
Adam Smith
Economic History
Mercantilism
Physiocracy
Price Theory
Subjective Value
Usury
Alfred Marshall
Business Cycles
Classical Economics
Historical School
Institutionalism
Marginal Utility
Marxism
Monetary Theory
Welfare Economics
Business Cycle Theory
Keynesian Economics
Monetary Reform
Stockholm School
Uncertainty
Economic Development
International Trade
Mathematical Economics
Friedrich A. Hayek
Austrian School
Methodology
Cartels
Insurance
Labor Law
Methodenstreit
Social Policy
Communism
Marginalism
Aristotle
Thomas Aquinas
Feudalism
Natural Law
Othmar Spann
Property Rights
Slavery
Social Justice
Guilds
Labor Theory of Value
Monopoly
Production Costs
Interest Rates
Quantity Theory of Money
Accounting
Banking
Inflation
Social Contract
Gustav Schmoller
Capitalism
Max Weber
Werner Sombart
Profit and Loss
Balance of Payments
Exchange Rates
Protectionism
Empiricism
Individualism
Utilitarianism
John Locke
Political Philosophy
Thomas Hobbes
Free Trade
William Petty
Velocity of Circulation
Bank of England
Banknotes
Credit Expansion
Fiat Money
John Law
Public Finance
Demography
Division of Labor
Poverty
David Hume
Entrepreneurship
Interest Theory
Political Economy
Richard Cantillon
Welfare State
Equilibrium
Supply and Demand
Bureaucracy
Laissez-faire
Tax Reform
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Montesquieu
Voltaire
Exchange Value
Income Distribution
Productivity
Competition
Karl Marx
Surplus Value
Capital Theory
Diminishing Returns
Causality
Liberalism
Capital Accumulation
Ground Rent
Saving
Wages
Interventionism
Industrial Revolution
Jeremy Bentham
John Stuart Mill
David Ricardo
James Mill
Nassau Senior
Planned Economy
Scarcity
Utility
Say's Law
Innovation
Thomas Malthus
Labor Market
Productivity of Capital
Stationary Economy
Forced Saving
Gold Standard
Comparative Advantage
Effective Demand
Infrastructure
Thomas Tooke
Time Preference
Abstinence Theory
Cooperatives
Trade Unions
Banking School
Central Banking
Currency School
Frederic Bastiat
Jean-Baptiste Say
Antoine Augustin Cournot
Auguste Comte
Positivism
Anarchism
Jean Charles Léonard de Sismondi
Socialism
Underconsumption
Johann Heinrich von Thunen
Opportunity Cost
Johann Karl Rodbertus
Edmund Burke
Immanuel Kant
Nationalism
Bruno Hildebrand
Friedrich List
Karl Knies
Wilhelm Roscher
Sozialpolitik
Carl Menger
Eugen von Bohm-Bawerk
Karl Bucher
Lujo Brentano
Ideal Type
Verstehen
Value Judgments
Adolf Wagner
Joseph Schumpeter
Arthur Spiethoff
Economic Crisis
Georg Friedrich Knapp
Franz Oppenheimer
Corporatism
Class Struggle
Dialectical Materialism
Friedrich Engels
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Determinism
Overproduction
Lorenz von Stein
Proletariat
Totalitarianism
Collective Bargaining
Karl Kautsky
Statism
Syndicalism
Imperialism
Otto Bauer
Rosa Luxemburg
Rudolf Hilferding
Vladimir Lenin
Leon Walras
William Stanley Jevons
Francis Ysidro Edgeworth
Perfect Competition
Friedrich von Wieser
Spontaneous Order
Zurechnung
Herbert Spencer
Walter Bagehot
Externalities
Frank Knight
John Hicks
Indifference Curves
Vilfredo Pareto
Knut Wicksell
Natural Rate of Interest
Roundabout Production
Subsistence Fund
Valuation
Irving Fisher
John Bates Clark
Bimetallism
Discount Rate
Gustav Cassel
Ludwig von Mises
Price Stability
Thorstein Veblen
New Deal
Democracy
Geopolitics
Lausanne School
Collectivism
Economic Calculation
Emil Lederer
Nationalization
Benito Mussolini
Adolf Hitler
Agriculture
Nicholas Kaldor
War Economy
Walter Eucken
Ordoliberalism
Russian Revolution
Joseph Stalin
Depreciation
Investment
Expectations
Great Depression
Hans Mayer
John Maynard Keynes
Lionel Robbins
Milton Friedman
Praxeology
Jacques Rueff
Monopolistic Competition
Liquidity
Robert Triffin
Arthur Cecil Pigou
Fritz Machlup
Joan Robinson
Unemployment
Wage Rigidity
Oligopoly
John Kenneth Galbraith
Oskar Morgenstern
Oskar Lange
Ragnar Frisch
George Stigler
Egalitarianism
Jan Tinbergen
Price Level
Gottfried Haberler
Neutral Money
Deflation
Stabilization
Acceleration Principle
Capital Structure
Ricardo Effect
Multiplier
Devaluation
Exchange Control
Gunnar Myrdal
Monetary Equilibrium
Macroeconomics
Alvin Hansen
Deficit Spending
Fiscal Policy
Paul Samuelson
Jacob Viner
Purchasing Power
Terms of Trade
Bretton Woods
International Monetary Fund
Marshall Plan
Special Drawing Rights
National Income
Elasticity of Demand
Game Theory
John von Neumann
International Liquidity
Monetary Policy
Rationality
Anne-Robert-Jacques Turgot
Autarky
Wilhelm Ropke
G.L.S. Shackle
Exploitation
Hoarding
Table of Contents · 278 segments
1
Front Matter, Title Page, Copyright, and Cataloging Data
essay
2
Contents: Front Matter and Book One, Thirteenth through Eighteenth Centuries
essay
3
Contents: Book Two, Conflicting Economic Doctrines, 1800–1918
essay
4
Contents: Book Three, Developments after the First World War
essay
5
Table of Contents Continued: International Relations, Growth, Econometrics, Decision Theory, and Appendixes
bibliography
6
Publisher's Preface
essay
7
Author's Preface
essay
8
Biographical Introduction
essay
9
Overview: A Summary of A History of Economic Reasoning
essay
10
Opening Title Pages for Book One, Part I, Chapter 1
chapter
11
The Logical Background of Thomistic Economics
theoretical
12
The Thomistic Conception of Social Collectivities
theoretical
13
Scholastic Moral Theology and Medieval Social Order (continued)
theoretical
14
The Conception of Private Property
theoretical
15
The Thomistic Doctrine of Value
theoretical
16
The Doctrine of the Just Price
theoretical
17
The Problem of Unlawful Profit
theoretical
18
The Prohibition of Usury
theoretical
19
The Impact of Nominalism
theoretical
20
Changing Economic Views
theoretical
21
Changes in Economic Institutions
theoretical
22
The School of Salamanca and the Jesuit Scholastics
theoretical
23
Part II and Chapter 3: The Transition Period—Changing and Conflicting Patterns of Thought
theoretical
24
Transition Period: From Nominalism to Mercantilist Differentiation
theoretical
25
The Spirit of Capitalism: Capitalist Institutions, Risk, and Nominalist Reasoning
theoretical
26
Early Mercantilists: Bullionism, Intrinsic Money, and Bodin
theoretical
27
The Balance of Trade Concept
theoretical
28
Colbertism and French Power-Oriented Economic Policy
theoretical
29
Changes in the Conception of Price, Profit, and Interest on Money
theoretical
30
Baconian Mercantilism: Territorial Distribution of Divergent Patterns of Thought
chapter
31
Natural Law and the Utilitarian Approach to Social Problems
theoretical
32
Baconian Social Philosophy: Hobbes, Locke, and Utilitarian Foundations
theoretical
33
Emergence of the Empirical Approach to Economics
theoretical
34
Theories of Value, Price, Money, and Interest on Capital
theoretical
35
The Problem of Fiduciary Money
theoretical
36
The Problem of Productive Employment
theoretical
37
Refined Mercantilism: Self-Regulating Forces in Cantillon and Hume
theoretical
38
The Last Champions of Mercantilism
theoretical
39
Conclusion of Steuart’s Mercantilism and Italian Mercantilists
theoretical
40
Refined Mercantilism in Italian Economic Thought
theoretical
41
Cameralist Economics: Intellectual Background of Early Cameralism
chapter
42
Cameralism as an Administrative Discipline
theoretical
43
Cameralism as a Branch of Higher Learning
theoretical
44
Austrian Cameralism and Administrative Economic Policy
theoretical
45
French Reaction to Colbertism
theoretical
46
Conflicting Social Philosophies in Eighteenth-Century France
theoretical
47
Malebranche, Cartesian Method, and Quesnay’s Natural Order
theoretical
48
Quesnay’s Tableau Économique
theoretical
49
The Socioeconomic Doctrine of the Physiocrats
theoretical
50
Disintegration and Influence of Physiocracy
theoretical
51
Galiani’s Theory of Money and Subjective Value
theoretical
52
Turgot, Condillac, and Other Subjective Value Theorists
theoretical
53
Development of Utilitarian Reasoning before Adam Smith
theoretical
54
Adam Smith’s Moral Philosophy and the Basis of Economics
theoretical
55
The Wealth of Nations: Structure, Value, and Productive Labor
theoretical
56
Adam Smith on Distribution, Capital, Money, and Foreign Trade
theoretical
57
Adam Smith’s Natural Order, Competition, and Legacy
theoretical
58
Book Two Introduction: Conflicting Economic Doctrines, 1800–1918
chapter
59
Part III: Versions of the Utilitarian Economic Doctrine, 1800-1870
chapter
60
Chapter 10: The Principles of Benthamite Economics — General Utilitarian Methodology
theoretical
61
Chapter 10: The Methodological Principles of Ricardian Economics
theoretical
62
Chapter 11: Ricardian Economics — The Concept of Exchange Value
theoretical
63
The Ricardian Economic System
theoretical
64
General Disturbing Factors: Technological Changes and Population Movements
theoretical
65
The Laws of Distribution: General Observations
theoretical
66
The Wage Theory
theoretical
67
The Theory of Rent
theoretical
68
The Theory of Profit and Interest on Capital
theoretical
69
The Role of Money and Credit
theoretical
70
Ricardian Monetary Theory and the Bullionist Debate
theoretical
71
The Theory of International Trade
theoretical
72
Early Discussions of Ricardian Economics: Short-Run Problems
theoretical
73
Methodological Issues in Ricardian Economics
theoretical
74
Early Discussions of Ricardian Economics: Methodology, Hypothetical Reasoning, and Competition
theoretical
75
Utilitarian Criticisms of Ricardian Economics: Objections to Abstract Analysis
theoretical
76
Utilitarian Criticisms of Ricardian Economics: Objections to the Labor Cost Theory of Value
theoretical
77
Ricardian Socialists and Socialist Uses of the Labor Theory of Value
theoretical
78
Modifications of the Ricardian Doctrine: The Economics of N. W. Senior
theoretical
79
J. S. Mill’s Principles and Post-Ricardian Economic Theory
theoretical
80
Money, Credit, the Currency Controversy, and Commercial Crises
theoretical
81
Chapter 13: The Spread of Smithian Economics — French Liberal Economics
chapter
82
Italian Versions of Liberal Economics and Francesco Ferrara
theoretical
83
Conflicting Methods of Theoretical Analysis
theoretical
84
The French Socialists
essay
85
The German Version of Smithian Economics
theoretical
86
American Discussions of Smithian Economics
essay
87
Chapter 14: German Idealistic Philosophies
theoretical
88
The Emergence of Historism
theoretical
89
The Program of the Historicoethical School
theoretical
90
Methodological Issues
theoretical
91
Chapter 15: Versions of the Organismic Approach — Conflicting Trends
chapter
92
The Struggle for a Value-Free Science
chapter
93
Discussion of Economic Theorems
chapter
94
Special Problems: Cartels, Trade, Cycles, Location Theory, and Knapp’s State Theory of Money
chapter
95
Liberal Socialists
theoretical
96
Neoscholastic Economics
theoretical
97
Dialectic Economics: The Marxian Doctrine—Philosophical Background
chapter
98
The Marxian Doctrine: The Materialistic Interpretation of History
theoretical
99
The Dialectic Conception of the Capitalist Economy
theoretical
100
The Breakdown Theory
theoretical
101
The Class Struggle
theoretical
102
Chapter 17: Versions of Marxism — The Revisionist Movement
chapter
103
Chapter 17: Versions of Marxism — Orthodox Marxism
chapter
104
Chapter 17: Versions of Marxism — The Bolshevist Version of Marxism and Opening of Marginal Economics
chapter
105
Chapter 18: The Roots of Marginal Utility Analysis
chapter
106
The Utilitarian Version of Marginalism
theoretical
107
The Mathematical Version of Marginalism: Walras
theoretical
108
The Psychological Version of Marginalism
theoretical
109
Post-Ricardian Economics: The Intellectual Climate of the Victorian Age
chapter
110
The Methodology of Marshallian Economics
theoretical
111
The Marshallian Theory
theoretical
112
Welfare Economics
theoretical
113
Chapter 20: The Elaboration of Marginal Utility Economics — The Development of Mathematical Versions
theoretical
114
General Problems of Psychological Marginalism
theoretical
115
The Rate of Interest as a Strategic Factor
theoretical
116
Theories of Distribution: General Considerations
theoretical
117
Interest and Profit
theoretical
118
Rent
theoretical
119
Wages
theoretical
120
Monetary Problems
theoretical
121
The Quantity Theory of Money
theoretical
122
The Problem of Business Fluctuations
theoretical
123
The American Approach to Marginalism: John Bates Clark
chapter
124
Chapter 23: Conflicting Trends — Pragmatic Economics
chapter
125
Institutionalist Economics
chapter
126
Critical Discussions of Marginal Utility Analysis and Opening of Book Three
chapter
127
Part VII: Organismic Economics
theoretical
128
The Decline of the Historical School: Conflicting Trends
chapter
129
Methodological Problems of Historism
chapter
130
Planning Along Organismic Lines
chapter
131
Chapter 25: Totalitarian Economics — The Problems of Fascist Economics
theoretical
132
National-Socialist Economics: Ideological and Racial Foundations
theoretical
133
National-Socialist Economic Control, Planning, and War Economy
theoretical
134
National-Socialist Economic Theory, Historical Relativism, and German Academic Compliance
theoretical
135
Eucken, Böhm, and the Ordo Response to Totalitarian Economic Relativism
theoretical
136
Part VIII: Dialectic Economics
chapter
137
Dialectic Reasoning in Western Europe
chapter
138
Bolshevist Economics: Discussions of the Transition Period
theoretical
139
Bolshevist Economics: The Theoretical Background of the Five-Year Plans
theoretical
140
Bolshevist Economics: Problems of Bolshevist Planning
theoretical
141
Changing Interpretations: Dialectical Orthodoxy, Zhdanovism, and Stalin’s Economic Laws
theoretical
142
The 1954 Political Economy Textbook and Post-Stalin Revisions
theoretical
143
Soviet Dialectical Planning, Western Market Thought, and the Opening of Hypothetical Economics
theoretical
144
Chapter 28: Methodological Issues — General Observations
theoretical
145
Chapter 28: Methodological Issues — Methodological Problems of Marginalism
theoretical
146
Chapter 28: Methodological Issues — Institutionalist Discussions
theoretical
147
American Institutionalism, Statistical Method, and Sociological Economics
theoretical
148
Methodological Discussions of French Economists
theoretical
149
Chapter 29: Further Discussion of Older Problems — Distribution Theory
chapter
150
Capital, Interest, and Marginal Productivity Debates
theoretical
151
Profit, Risk, Uncertainty, and Entrepreneurship
theoretical
152
Unemployment, Wage Rigidity, and Marginal Productivity Wage Theory
theoretical
153
Monopoly and Competition: Classical Assumptions, Duopoly, Bilateral Monopoly, and Stackelberg
theoretical
154
Marshallian Competition, Increasing Returns, Robinson, Chamberlin, and Triffin
theoretical
155
Monopoly Power, Workable Competition, Concentration, and Transition to Planning and Welfare
theoretical
156
Discussion About Planning: Equilibrium Models and Business Behavior
theoretical
157
Planning, the Great Depression, New Deal Policies, and Technocracy
theoretical
158
Socialist Calculation and Market-Socialist Planning Models
theoretical
159
Critiques of Fictional Planning and Postwar Democratic Planning Debates
theoretical
160
Welfare Economics: Utilitarian Origins, Pigou, and Utility Measurement
theoretical
161
Social Values, Indifference Curves, and Efficiency Analysis
theoretical
162
Compensation Criteria, Social Welfare Functions, and Arrow’s Summation Problem
theoretical
163
Tinbergen on Multidimensional Welfare, Income Distribution, and Transition to Chapter 31
theoretical
164
Chapter 31: Discussions about Money and Monetary Reform — The Quantity Equations and the Cash Balance Approach
theoretical
165
The Income Approach
theoretical
166
Problems of Monetary Reform
theoretical
167
Chapter 32: Discussions about the Business Cycle — General Observations
theoretical
168
Simple Monetary Theories
theoretical
169
Monetary Double-System Theories
theoretical
170
Nonmonetary Theories
theoretical
171
Business Cycle Policies and Part X Heading
essay
172
Part X: The "New Economics" — Chapter 33: Discussions of the Stockholm School
chapter
173
Chapter 34: Keynes's Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money
chapter
174
Chapter 35: Discussions of the "New Economics"
chapter
175
Interpretations of the Keynesian Theory
theoretical
176
The Stagnation Theorem
theoretical
177
Summary and Evaluation
theoretical
178
Chapter 36: Methodological Discussions of Dynamic Analysis
chapter
179
Dynamics versus Statics
theoretical
180
The Dynamic Elements of Post-Keynesian Economics
theoretical
181
Models of the Keynesian Type
theoretical
182
Other Dynamic Models of the Economy
theoretical
183
Part XI: International Relations — Chapter 38: International Trade Theory
chapter
184
Appendix A: The Theory of Location
theoretical
185
Appendix B: International Monetary Relations After the Second World War
theoretical
186
Chapter 39: Economic Growth and Economic Progress — Economic Growth of Industrialized Countries
chapter
187
Economic Growth of Underdeveloped Countries
essay
188
Theories of Economic Progress
theoretical
189
Chapter 40: Econometric Problems — Early Statistical Economics and Cobweb Analysis
chapter
190
Chapter 40: Econometric Problems — Tinbergen, Haavelmo, and the Econometric Program
chapter
191
Chapter 40: Econometric Problems — Model Building, Forecasting, and Identification
chapter
192
Chapter 40: Econometric Problems — Critiques, National Accounts, Input-Output Analysis, and Programming
chapter
193
Chapter 41: Theory of Decision Making — Theory of Choice, Risk, and Uncertainty
chapter
194
Critiques of Probability-Based Decision Theory under Uncertainty
theoretical
195
The Theory of Games
theoretical
196
Concluding Observations
chapter
197
Appendix A: Prolegomena to a History of Economic Reasoning — Introduction
essay
198
Baconian and Cartesian Economics
theoretical
199
Benthamite Economics
theoretical
200
Intuitional Economics
theoretical
201
Dialectic Economics
theoretical
202
Refinement of Hypothetical Reasoning
theoretical
203
Modified Ricardian Economics
theoretical
204
Varying Aspects of the Equilibrium Concept
theoretical
205
Concluding Observations
theoretical
206
Appendix B: Patterns of Economic Reasoning — Introduction
theoretical
207
The Concept of Economic Equilibrium
theoretical
208
The Maximization Principle
theoretical
209
The Notion of Time
theoretical
210
The Concept of Freedom
theoretical
211
The Concept of Law
theoretical
212
Conclusions
theoretical
213
Appendix C: Rationality
theoretical
214
System
theoretical
215
Development and Evolution
theoretical
216
Class
theoretical
217
Value
theoretical
218
Notes
footnotes
219
Notes to Book I, Chapter 1: Thomistic Economics
footnotes
220
Notes to Book I, Chapter 2: Disintegration of Thomistic Reasoning
footnotes
221
Notes to Book I, Chapter 3: Renaissance, Mercantilism, and Economic Individualism
footnotes
222
Notes to Book I, Chapter 4: Baconian Social Science, Natural Law, and Early Economic Analysis
footnotes
223
Chapter 4 Notes: Mercantilist Money, Trade, Population, and Labor Views (Continuation)
footnotes
224
Chapter 5 Notes: Cantillon, Hume, Steuart, and Italian Economic Thought
footnotes
225
Chapter 6 Notes: Cameralist Economics and German State Sciences
footnotes
226
Chapter 7 Notes: French Reform Thought, Physiocracy, and Laissez-Faire
footnotes
227
Chapter 8 Notes: Subjective Value in Galiani, Turgot, and Condillac
footnotes
228
Chapter 9 Notes: Moral Philosophy, Adam Smith, and Classical Political Economy
footnotes
229
Book II, Chapter 10 Notes: Utilitarianism, Bentham, Ricardo, and Economic Method
footnotes
230
Chapter 11 Notes: Ricardian Value, Say’s Law, Population, Rent, and Diminishing Returns
footnotes
231
Notes to Chapter 11, continued: Classical Distribution, Profit, Interest, Money, and Trade
footnotes
232
Notes to Chapter 12: Ricardian Economics, Methodology, Value, Wages, Money, and Banking
footnotes
233
Notes to Chapter 13: French, Italian, German, Socialist, and American Economic Thought
footnotes
234
Notes to Chapter 14: German Historical Schools, Historicism, National Economy, and Economic History
footnotes
235
Notes to Chapter 15, beginning: Sociolegal Economics, Cultural Science, and Sombart
footnotes
236
Chapter 15 Notes: German Economics, Methodology, Monetary Theory, and Social Thought
footnotes
237
Chapter 16 Notes: Marxian Method, Value Theory, Crisis Theory, and Class Conflict
footnotes
238
Chapter 17 Notes: Revisionist Marxism, Imperialism, Finance Capital, and Bolshevism
footnotes
239
Chapter 18 Notes: Early Marginal Utility and Subjective Value Theory
footnotes
240
Notes to Chapter 18, continued
footnotes
241
Notes to Chapter 19
footnotes
242
Notes to Chapter 20
footnotes
243
Notes to Chapter 21
footnotes
244
Notes to Chapter 22
footnotes
245
Notes to Chapter 23, beginning
footnotes
246
Notes to Chapter 23: Mitchell, Marginal Utility, and Equilibrium
footnotes
247
Book III, Chapter 24 Notes: German Economics, Business Cycles, Historicism, and Planning
footnotes
248
Chapter 25 Notes: Fascist Economics, National Socialism, and Ordoliberal Responses
footnotes
249
Chapter 26 Notes: Marxist Economics, Imperialism, and Socialism
footnotes
250
Chapter 27 Notes: Soviet Economic Thought, Planning, and Marxist-Leninist Doctrine
footnotes
251
Chapter 28 Notes: Economic Methodology, Institutionalism, and French Economic Sociology
footnotes
252
Chapter 29 Notes: Distribution, Capital Theory, and Interest
footnotes
253
Chapter 29 Notes: Capital Demand, Profit, Uncertainty, and Firm Behavior
footnotes
254
Chapter 29 Notes: Wage Theory, Employment, and Collective Bargaining
footnotes
255
Chapter 29 Notes: Monopoly, Oligopoly, and Imperfect Competition
footnotes
256
Chapter 30 Notes: Economic Planning and Socialist Calculation
footnotes
257
Chapter 30 Notes: Welfare Economics and Social Welfare Criteria
footnotes
258
Chapter 31 Notes: Quantity Theory, Velocity, Neutral Money, and Forced Saving
footnotes
259
Chapter 31 Notes: Gold Standard, Stable Money, and Inflation
footnotes
260
Chapter 32 Notes: Business Cycle Forecasting, Acceleration, and International Cycles
footnotes
261
Chapter 32 Notes: Monetary and Credit Theories of the Trade Cycle
footnotes
262
Chapter 32 Notes: Purchasing Power, Investment Cycles, Long Waves, and Stabilization Policy
footnotes
263
Chapter 33 Notes: Stockholm School Monetary Theory and Swedish Economic Planning
footnotes
264
Chapter 34 Notes: Keynes’s General Theory and Early Keynesian Interpretation
footnotes
265
Chapter 35 Notes: Post-Keynesian Debates, Full Employment, and Secular Stagnation
footnotes
266
Chapter 36 Notes: Static and Dynamic Economics, Multiplier Analysis, and Acceleration
footnotes
267
Chapter 37 Notes: Dynamic Growth Models, Trade Cycles, and Stabilization Policy
footnotes
268
Chapter 38 Notes: International Trade, Balance of Payments, and Location Theory
footnotes
269
Chapter 38 Notes (continued): European Recovery and International Monetary Liquidity
footnotes
270
Chapter 39 Notes: Economic Growth and Development
footnotes
271
Chapter 40 Notes: Econometrics, Business Cycles, and Mathematical Economics
footnotes
272
Chapter 41 Notes: Choice, Risk, Uncertainty, and Game Theory
footnotes
273
Notes to Appendixes: Appendix A on Economic Reasoning
footnotes
274
Endnotes to Appendices B and C
footnotes
275
Works by Karl Pribram
bibliography
276
Index
bibliography
277
About the Author
essay
278
Publisher Colophon and Library Return Card
essay