Denying Human Homogeneity: Eugenics & The Making of Post-Classical Economics
Sandra J. Peart and
David Levy
Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2003, vol. 25, issue 3, 261-288
Abstract:
The question we propose to address is how did economics move from the classical period characterized by the hardest possible doctrine of initial human homogeneityall the observed differences among people arise from incentives, luck, and historyto become comfortable with accounts of human behavior which alleged foundational differences among and within races of people? (Darity 1995) In this paper, we shall argue that early British eugenics thinkers racialized economics in the post-classical period.
Date: 2003
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