What Do You Suggest?
Tyler
Cowen, an econ Blogger whom I read regularly, writes
on Marginal Revolution HERE .
He offers an answer to the task “If
we could preserve only one sentence…”. This is a teasing question asked of Richard Feynman, according
to John Lancaster in the London Review of Books (a.k.a,, at least to me, as the
Labour Review of Books). Feynman,
physicist, was asked: “what he would pass on if the whole edifice of
modern scientific knowledge had been lost, and all he could give to posterity
was a single sentence.” Feynman offered: “all things are made of atoms”.
Tyler Cowen suggests for economists: “Today is a
long run from some time back.”
I like that. It captures the essence of the historical perspective in Smithian
political economy.
Study the past to understand the present. That is about as ambitious as any
economist can be. Ignore the
future. You cannot influence it if
you do not understand how the past created the present.
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