| Alfred Marshall, Mary Paley Marshall - Economics - 1879 - 334 pages
...perhaps in his own country. The only security against this narrowness is a liberal mental cultivation... A person is not likely to be a good economist who...one another, they cannot rightly be understood apart ; but this by no means proves that the material and industrial phenomena of society are not themselves... | |
| Alfred Marshall - Economics - 1891 - 832 pages
...specialists even more futile in social than in physical science. Mill conceding this continues : — " A person is not likely to be a good economist who...another, they cannot rightly be understood apart; but this by no means proves that the material and industrial phenomena of society are not themselves... | |
| Arthur Herbert Dyke Acland - Best books - 1891 - 168 pages
...Murray 012 o Vasari, Lives of Painters, Sculptors, and Architects. 6 vols. Bell. Each 036 II. ECONOMISTS A person is not likely to be a good economist who is nothing else. A. & MP MARSHALL. Fawcett, Leslie Stephen. ,, Speeches. Jevons (Letters and Journal), Mrs. Jevons.... | |
| Alfred Marshall - Economic factors - 1892 - 496 pages
...field, to keep up close and constant correspondence with those who are engaged in neighbouring fields. "A person is not likely to be a good economist who...one another, they cannot rightly be understood apart ; but this by no means proves that the material and industrial phenomena of society are not themselves... | |
| Alfred Marshall - Economics - 1916 - 916 pages
...specialists even more futile in social than in physical science. Mill conceding this continues: — "A person is not likely to be a good economist who is nothing but failed else. Social phenomena acting and reacting on one another, they can- ^^there not rightly... | |
| Oswald Fred Boucke - Economics - 1921 - 464 pages
...precedent in his university lectures -on moral philosophy. As JS Mill put it in his essay on Comte: "A person is not likely to be a good economist, who is nothing else." It was true certainly in the earlier period of economic thought, and even later we find substantiation... | |
| Benoy Kumar Sarkar - India - 1914 - 408 pages
...man's action in society must be co-extensive with the whole of social science. According to him, " a person is not likely to be a good economist who is nothing else. Social phenomena,3 acting and re-acting on one another, cannot rightly be understood apart." *Dr. Ingram4... | |
| Michael Novak - Social Science - 1984 - 316 pages
...like anyone else, must concern himself with the ultimate aims of man. — ALFRED MARSHALL Principles A person is not likely to be a good economist who is nothing else. — JOHN STUART MILL Auguste Comte's Positivism At the peak of his career, Heinrich Pesch was a compelling... | |
| John Cunningham Wood - Business & Economics - 1991 - 676 pages
...science, which must therefore be known to the economist. This is the true meaning of Mill's dictum that "a person is not likely to be a good economist who is nothing else" (Mill 1865, p. II),22 The extra knowledge is needed, not for the inculcation of "high and benevolent... | |
| John Cunningham Wood - Business & Economics - 1993 - 534 pages
...economics. Indeed, one must be more than an economist alone. He quoted John Stuart Mill with approval: "A person is not likely to be a good economist who...another, they cannot rightly be understood apart. . ."(p. 771). Unfinished Unintentions Natura non facitsaltum was Marshall's Darwinian theme, and the... | |
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