Book Description
Francis Ysidro Edgeworth (1845--1926) was one of the pre-eminent Irish economists and statisticians of his era. A nephew of the successful novelist Maria Edgeworth, he was educated at Trinity College, Dublin and Balliol College, Oxford. From 1891 until his retirement in 1922 he was Drummond Professor of Economics at Oxford and a fellow of All Souls College.
Shortly after his Oxford appointments the highly-regarded and influential Economic Journal was founded. Edgeworth was made editor, a position J. M. Keynes was eventually to assume upon Edgeworth’s death in 1926. The papers in this collection comprise the thirty-four most significant articles and seventy-five book reviews which Edgeworth presented to the Economic Journal in its first thirty years. With an introduction and index, the papers are arranged under seven subject headings: Value-and-Distribution, Monopoly, Money, International Trade, Taxation, Mathematical Economics and Reviews.
The results of Edgeworth’s application of mathematics to ethics, statistics and to the pure theory of international trade, taxation and monopoly theory remain highly influential. His generalized utility function, indifference curve and the contract curve have all became standard devices of economic theory. References to the economic ideas of his contemporaries are frequent -- Marshall, Böhm-Bawerk, Mill, Pareto, Pigou, Price and Sidgwick et al. -- and as such this important collection will be of benefit and interest to students of pure and applied economic theory as well as modern economic history.
‘The Oxford Chair of Political Economy has had occupants who appeared more frequently in the public eye; it has had none who served its object with a more single-minded devotion or made more substantial contributions to the subject.’
-- Times Literary Supplement
--This text refers to an alternate
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--This text refers to an alternate
Hardcover
edition.