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NEITHER ECONOMIST NOR HISTORIAN

E. Roy Weintraub

Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2024, vol. 46, issue 4, 524-534

Abstract: I defended my doctoral dissertation on stochastic stability of general equilibrium systems in Penn’s Applied Mathematics program in fall 1968. That year I began teaching math for economists, mathematical economics, microeconomics, and even econometrics at Rutgers College, where I remained for a couple of years before moving to Duke. At Rutgers I saw that graduate students took required courses in micro, macro, statistics, math, and econometrics, and there were electives in other fields like public finance and economic history. I didn’t know that there was any subdiscipline, or field, called the history of economic thought.

Date: 2024
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