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Citation: J. Persky, Multiple reviews of Mehrling's The Money Interest and the Public Interest:American monetary thought, 1920-1970, RES HIST EC, 18A, 2000, pp. 179-197
Citation: Re. Backhouse, Redman's the rise of political economy as a science: Methodology and the classical economists, RES HIST EC, 18A, 2000, pp. 201-231
Citation: Jp. Tiemstra, Purves's the Web of text and the Web of God: An essay on the third information transformation, RES HIST EC, 18A, 2000, pp. 261-265
Citation: P. Diesing, Ingrams's reason, history, and politics: The communitarian grounds of legitimacy in the modern age, RES HIST EC, 18A, 2000, pp. 267-283
Citation: S. Rappaport, Sent's the evolving rationality of rational expectations: An assessment ofThomas Sargent's achievements, RES HIST EC, 18A, 2000, pp. 293-300
Citation: Wj. Barber, Bordo, golden, and white's the defining moment: The great depression and the American economy in the twentieth century, RES HIST EC, 18A, 2000, pp. 301-310
Citation: W. Eltis, Winch's riches and poverty: An intellectual history of political economy in Britain, 1750-1834, RES HIST EC, 18A, 2000, pp. 343-352
Citation: Sg. Medema, Pearson's origins of law and economics: The economists' new science of law, 1830-1930 and Fried's the progressive assault on Laissez Faire: Robert Hale and the first law and economics movement, RES HIST EC, 18A, 2000, pp. 353-364
Citation: Em. Sent, Wible's the economics of science: Methodology and epistemology as if economics really mattered, RES HIST EC, 18A, 2000, pp. 365-368