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Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2019) 51 (2): 237–257.
Published: 01 April 2019
...Luc Bovens; Adrien Lutz There are three slogans in the history of socialism that are very close in wording, namely, the famous Cabet-Blanc-Marx slogan: From each according to his ability; To each according to his needs ; the earlier Saint-Simon–Pecqueur slogan: To each according to his ability...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2019) 51 (5): 970–973.
Published: 01 October 2019
.... Arguments with differ- ent premises are distinct arguments, even if they lead to the same conclusion. As a writer, Boettke is sometimes prone to slogans where arguments would be more apposite. Some variation of the slogan Institutional problems demand institu- tional solutions appears more than a half...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1978) 10 (3): 505–506.
Published: 01 September 1978
...-Stalin line of development,
which transformed Marx’s grand analysis into a political instrument used for
factional and party purposes. By the 1920s official Marxism had been reduced
almost to a series of slogans and code phrases. Perlman subjected this
bowdlerized version...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1978) 10 (3): 504–505.
Published: 01 September 1978
... used for
factional and party purposes. By the 1920s official Marxism had been reduced
almost to a series of slogans and code phrases. Perlman subjected this
bowdlerized version to a thoroughgoing critique. This was before the redis-
covery of the early Marx and the recent revival...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1992) 24 (1): 237–239.
Published: 01 March 1992
..., by contrast, is commonly brandished as a science of social
opposition. Sociology emerged out of nineteenth-century political econ-
omy (most early German sociologists were trained as economists),
amidst slogans that “sociology that is not socialism is nothing
I. See Proctor 1991, esp. chap...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1970) 2 (2): 205–224.
Published: 01 June 1970
...
must grant that their works are not turgid, that they avoid jargon
(above the sloganeering level), that they aim directly at a public
largely self-educated, that they are of reasonable length, and that they
specialize in tying together pieces from disparate disciplines.
20. What has...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1997) 29 (1): 159–161.
Published: 01 March 1997
...-
tions, Alfred Marshall’s Principles of Economics should be viewed as basi-
cally a “modernization” of Ricardo.
10. The “old fogeys” of the 1920s and 1930s should have changed their alleged
slogan of “it’s all in Marshall” in favor of “it’s all in Ricardo.” Provided,
however...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1973) 5 (1): 089–109.
Published: 01 March 1973
... in PoZkways and other
late essays. Sumner’s response to Darwinism is revealing, not because
he adopted slogans of struggle and survival willy-nilly (he did not)
nor because he finally became a progressive, but because his piecemeal
accommodation to the new science reflected a changing assessment...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2017) 49 (4): 715–717.
Published: 01 December 2017
... of these Quaestiones. The editor’s intro-
duction makes this connection explicit (28–31) and does so very well. He uses it,
however, to reach a conclusion that comes from Karl Marx rather than Gerard of
Siena. The editor’s hope is that “the spirit of the scholastics” will assist us, so that “the
slogan...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1990) 22 (4): 758–760.
Published: 01 November 1990
...
Book Reviews 759
sloganeering is a solid, coherent theory with profound cultural-historical insight
coupled with intense ethical concern. “Differences make a diflerence, ” asserted
William James repeatedly, and clearly Dugger wants to make a difference in the
nature, scope, and intent...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2020) 52 (3): 413–434.
Published: 01 June 2020
... and unaccountable elite. In that sense, the object of the protests was not novel, but the way it was framed the 99 versus the 1 percent was (Gould-Wartofsky 2015; Ramos Pinto 2019). This highly successful slogan is derived from an abstract form of quan- ti cation of the distribution of incomes, produced...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2003) 35 (Suppl_1): 42–73.
Published: 01 December 2003
... of free trade, and promul-
gators of what has remained that policy’s slogan for over two centuries,
“laissez-faire, laissez-passer”31—freedom of commerce was the policy
of an administration sensitive to a purpose-driven natural world.
Extending the language and principles of sentimental empiricism...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2011) 43 (2): 257–271.
Published: 01 June 2011
... on this subject (indeed I believe he certainly
did that), but his diagnosis that Smith was skeptical of the pure market
economy was not mistaken. Before long, however, Smith would emerge in
the image in which he is mostly seen in standard views today, as a politi
cal spokesperson for simple slogans—mostly...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1982) 14 (1): 121–125.
Published: 01 March 1982
..., appears in the same form in a number of
different places, often before the exposition has prepared the way for the state-
ment of the idea.
So much of what Gerbier says is intellectual sloganeering, rather than anal-
ysis or exposition, that one reads page after page in the expectation...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2023) 55 (1): 77–102.
Published: 01 February 2023
... in the American colonies, which were galvanized by the slogan “No taxation without representation.” In The Case of the Officers of Excise , Paine already expressed a series of political convictions that he would develop further in Common Sense and also, much later, in Rights of Man . These convictions led him...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2017) 49 (4): 717–721.
Published: 01 December 2017
... is that “the spirit of the scholastics” will assist us, so that “the
slogan ‘from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs’ might
finally be realized” (30). That sentiment does have roots in a moral concern, although
the results in regimes that have adopted it as their goal have not been...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (1975) 7 (2): 209–226.
Published: 01 June 1975
... for competi-
tion are no longer realized, J. B. Clark, the liberal, rejects the policy
of laisser-faire. To match Walras’ demand “Restons socialistes,
c’est-a-dire progres~isteswe can propose for Clark the slogan
“Let us remain liberal, that is to say, optimists”; the latter slogan
coinciding...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2009) 41 (Suppl_1): 27–34.
Published: 01 December 2009
...-
tal, whether through an analog of pension funds or in some other way.
We would have to make a reality of Henry Luce’s “people’s capitalism,”
not an empty slogan.
I don’t intend to make a proposal. My goal is to point out that this is
the kind of shift that the process of economic growth might...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2022) 54 (5): 1005–1010.
Published: 01 October 2022
.... Once someone becomes famous, they run the risk that anything they say is reinterpreted to fit the preoccupations of others, much like a theory might be summarized in “a one-line slogan ” (which Sraffa urged Sen not to do, as we learn in chap. 16 [261]). This dilution through fame can compromise...
Journal Article
History of Political Economy (2022) 54 (3): 547–569.
Published: 01 June 2022
..., for example, in the very optimistic assumption that she could intuitively distinguish truthful informants from “slogan bores, who could not go beyond saying the correct thing” (Robinson [1953] 1977 : 11). Perceiving frank and honest conversations as the norm, she made a point of explicitly reporting each...
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