And yet, despite the seemingly scientific nature of this language, we seem hardly better able to pinpoint the nature of economic reality than the scholastics were able to count the angels. To be taken seriously in politics means being able to use this logic. The more I read in the subject, the more I agree with him. Robert Skidelsky, in his enormous biography of Keynes, remarks that economics today occupies the same situation as theology did in the Middle Ages-as a complex a priori logic that can be used to reach any number of contradictory conclusions. The Deficit Myth: Modern Monetary Theory and the Birth of the People’s Economy by Stephanie Kelton Running the (Full) M… on The Madrid Half-MarathonĢ023: New Year… on From Gold to Glory: A Slice of…Ģ023: New Year… on Summertime in Andalucía: Three…Ģ023: New Year… on Summertime in Andalucía: …Ģ023: New Year… on Summertime in Andalucía: Jerez… Summertime in Andalucía: Jerez and Cádiz.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |