Economic Efficiency and Social Justice traces the story of the development of utilitarian political economy.
Bentham, James and John Mill, Jevons, Sidgwick and Edgeworth all saw themselves as members of a distinct school of economists who took the pursuit of happiness as a guiding principle for the behaviour of individuals and governments. The greatest or general happiness became the ultimate test for all public policy and economic issues.
John Bonner's outstanding account of the development of utilitarian economics from the eighteenth to nineteenth centuries examines, in turn, the links between classical economics and the utilitarians, the influence of utilitarianism on modern welfare economics and the lives and times of the classical utilitarians.
Now that utilitarianism is again in fashion, among philosophers and social scientists as well as economists, John Bonner's book reminds students, scholars and policy makers that the classical utilitarians held contradictory views on what happiness could include, how utility could be measured, and whether they were radical reformers or supporters of the establishment.
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In U.S.A.
Da: Premium Classics, Chemung, NY, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condizione: Fair. Fair condition. PAGES- many underlinings and marginal markings (no marginal notes), blank front endpage has personal writing (partially erased) at top; age-related yellowing, few other (trivial) stains, generally clean; minor bends, no rips. COVER- medium wear- rubwear/minor scratches, minor wear on edges, minor creases around edges, no rips; clean. 200+ pgs. Not ex-library. Book. Codice articolo 004779
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Da: PAPER CAVALIER UK, London, Regno Unito
Condizione: good. A good reading copy. May contain markings or be a withdrawn library copy. Codice articolo 9781852782955-4
Quantità: 1 disponibili