tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4900303239154048192.post1864764390344843238..comments2024-03-06T06:34:42.881-05:00Comments on EconoSpeak: Samuelson And Academic Anti-SemitismUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4900303239154048192.post-31719824450217349012010-05-20T21:54:27.227-04:002010-05-20T21:54:27.227-04:00There remains zero evidence that Hayek was an anti...There remains zero evidence that Hayek was an anti-semite.<br /><br />The atmosphere Hayek inhabited was one were the Wittgensteins were both family and close friends of his mother -- and Hayek created several organizations were his friends and intellectual associates were Jews, and Hayek worked to advance their careers and in some cases save their lives.<br /><br />Samuelson held opoen bigotries against Hayek on ideological grounds -- and worked to undermine Hayek via patent misrepresentations.<br /><br />Samuelson's whole presentation on Hayek is gross, untrue, and unworthy of a scholar of his standing.Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13532630855794099767noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4900303239154048192.post-56140491875494533422009-12-17T11:41:47.836-05:002009-12-17T11:41:47.836-05:00Feel I should complete the footnote I quoted, whic...Feel I should complete the footnote I quoted, which has a further dig at Keynes.<br /><br />"Keynes's visceral repugnance would interest future historians less if it never contaminated his intellectual judgments. However, early on, like Bertrand Russell, Keynes did recognize barbaric evils in Lenin's utopia. Strange though that instead of discovering the key role of Georgian Josef Stalin, it was the beastliness of Leon (Lev) Trotsky that Keynes's pen picks on."rosserjb@jmu.eduhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09300046915843554101noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4900303239154048192.post-49468065385583769192009-12-17T11:33:40.602-05:002009-12-17T11:33:40.602-05:00I agree with BR on Wilson. Consilience at one poin...I agree with BR on Wilson. Consilience at one point makes the astonishing and nihilistic claim that Kant's ethics was all wrong because he didn't understand the brain. A 'scientific' ethics? - this is a monstrous misunderstanding of what morality is.kevin quinnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04880872194080353414noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4900303239154048192.post-10424083085543442092009-12-17T09:47:54.341-05:002009-12-17T09:47:54.341-05:00Brenda,
A somewhat known tidbit about Samuelson&#...Brenda,<br /><br />A somewhat known tidbit about Samuelson's Principles text is that it was already pre-watered down in its first edition in 1948, although he would water it down further later as the McCarthyite rampage accelerated in the early 1950s. The first attempt at a Principles text incorporating Keynesian ideas was out in 1947 by Lorie Tarshis, but dropped through the cracks like a stone due to it (and him) being viciously attacked for alleged "Marxist socialism."<br /><br />Shag,<br /><br />Well, I have always thought that distinguishing hard and soft sciences was useful, with such things as being able to do controlled experiments something that contributes to hardness. Thus, experimental economics may be more scientific than history of thought, or whatever, and this pattern even holds within the hard sciences themselves, with microbiology preening itself as harder than, say, ecology.<br /><br />BTW, Wilson is a bit too full of himself. People who hand out lines like his are often out to impose some almost mechanical version of a harder science theory on economics or sociology, as Wilson did with his much reviled attempted "sociobiology." His snide remarks should be seen in the light of the widespread rejection of this attempt by him ("Those naughty people picking on me are not real scientists, boo hoo").rosserjb@jmu.eduhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09300046915843554101noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4900303239154048192.post-68526530560526983302009-12-17T08:07:19.780-05:002009-12-17T08:07:19.780-05:00Pages 343 and 344 in the hardcover version of '...Pages 343 and 344 in the hardcover version of 'John Kenneth Galbraith - his life, his politics, his economics' by Richard Parker. First Edition 2005.(Farrar, Stauss and Giroux, New York)Myrtle Blackwoodhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07427043367624101075noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4900303239154048192.post-41232831606289590842009-12-17T08:05:22.425-05:002009-12-17T08:05:22.425-05:00I'm not an economist but am interested in the ...I'm not an economist but am interested in the thinking of economists. I am not a fan of Jeff Jacoby, who has had an Op-Ed column in the Boston Globe for years as its resident conservative. But Jacoby's column yesterday (12/16/09) on economists and economics was on target. The problem for Jacoby, however, is that Bush/Cheney economics was not targeted by him over its 8 years as he enabled most of the failed efforts of that administration.<br /><br />I read all the tributes to Samuelson with great interest. He was very accomplished. But economics is not science, as Jacoby points out - as did E. O. Wilson in Consilience a few years back.Shag from Brooklinehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07312591102812315460noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4900303239154048192.post-45148684080094688732009-12-17T08:04:53.536-05:002009-12-17T08:04:53.536-05:00Why do I tend to expect better of academics?
Ther...Why do I tend to expect better of academics?<br /><br />There's an interestig paragraph or two on Samuelson in Richard Parker's biography of John Kenneth Galbraith, btw Barkley. <br /><br />He writes about the (very) effective self-censorship happening in the economics profession in the McCarthy era:<br /><br />"<i>...For others, the merits of self-censorship had become obvious. Kenneth Arrow who'd ben a Norman Thomas-style democratic socialist in college, in the 1950s "largely abstained from contemporary political involvements." [19] Herbert Simon found harrassment the norm even then, and for years later, Samuelson recalled being actutely aware that "if you were a teacher at many a school around the country and the Board of Regents of your university was on your neck for using subversive textbooks, it was no laughing matter." After a young William F Buckley savaged in in 'God and Man at Yale', he carefully reworked his popular 'Economics' college text more than once:<br /><br />"My last wish was to have an intransigent formulation that would be read by no one....As a result I followed an Aesopian policy of paying careful attention to every criticism of every line and word of my text....In a sense this careful wording achieved its purpose: at least some of my critics were reduced to complaining that I played peek-a-boo with the reader and didn't come out and declare my true meaning...I reread today, say the fifth edition of the book, with a certain irritation for the care with which many matters are formulated."[20] <br /><br />Samuelson's textbook contained no more than a few words on American defense spending, and none on its SIZE in relation to the federal budget or its effect on the economy. IN this it was not alone: all the major economic textbooks did the same. [21]...</i>"<br /><br />It's interesting that Samuelson had the same reaction to his writing as I did to his writing 32 years ago.<br /><br />Economist Michael Hudson, at least, doesn't beat around the bush. AMerica's defense spending in the 1950s and 1960s can fully explain America's persistent balance of payments deficit he says....and much, much greater losses (I might add) that will never be fully quantified <b>nor ever mitigated</b>.Myrtle Blackwoodhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07427043367624101075noreply@blogger.com