Frases de Robert L. Heilbroner

Robert L. Heilbroner was an American economist and historian of economic thought. The author of some 20 books, Heilbroner was best known for The Worldly Philosophers: The Lives, Times and Ideas of the Great Economic Thinkers , a survey of the lives and contributions of famous economists, notably Adam Smith, Karl Marx, and John Maynard Keynes. Wikipedia  

✵ 24. marzo 1919 – 4. enero 2005
Robert L. Heilbroner: 39   frases 1   Me gusta

Robert L. Heilbroner: Frases en inglés

“When we estrange ourselves from history we do not enlarge, we diminish ourselves, even as individuals. We subtract from our lives one meaning which they do in fact possess, whether we recognize it or not. We cannot help living in history. We can only fail to be aware of it.”

Fuente: The Future As History (1960), Chapter IV, Part 9, The Grand Dynamic of History, p. 209
Contexto: In an age which no longer waits patiently through this life for the rewards of the next, it is a crushing spiritual blow to lose one's sense of participation in mankind's journey, and to see only a huge milling-around, a collective living-out of lives with no larger purpose than the days which each accumulates. When we estrange ourselves from history we do not enlarge, we diminish ourselves, even as individuals. We subtract from our lives one meaning which they do in fact possess, whether we recognize it or not. We cannot help living in history. We can only fail to be aware of it. If we are to meet, endure, and transcend the trials and defeats of the future — for trials and defeats there are certain to be — it can only be from a point of view which, seeing the future as part of the sweep of history, enables us to establish our place in that immense procession in which is incorporated whatever hope humankind may have.

“No more profound moral indictment of capitalism had ever been posed.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter VII, The Underworld of Economics, p. 188
Contexto: The book was called Imperialism; it was a devastating volume. For here was the most important and searing criticism which had ever been levied against the profit system. The worst that Marx had claimed was that the system would destroy itself; what Hobson suggested was that it might destroy the world. He saw the process of imperialism as a relentless and restless tendency of capitalism to rescue itself from a self-imposed dilemma, a tendency that necessarily involved foreign commercial conquest and that thereby inescapably involved a constant risk of war. No more profound moral indictment of capitalism had ever been posed.

“The profit motive, we are constantly being told, is as old as man himself.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter II, The Economic Revolution, p. 15
Contexto: It may strike us as odd that the idea of gain is a relatively modern one; we are schooled to believe that man is essentially an acquisitive creature and that left to himself he will behave as any self-respecting businessman would. The profit motive, we are constantly being told, is as old as man himself.
Nothing could be further from the truth.

“Economic freedom is a highly desirable state — but in bust and boom we must be prepared to face the its consequences.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter IX, John Maynard Keynes, p. 257

“It was the unemployment that was the hardest to bear.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter IX, John Maynard Keynes, p. 240
Contexto: It was the unemployment that was the hardest to bear. The jobless millions were like an embolism in the nation's vital circulation; and while their indisputable existence argued more forcibly than any text that something was wrong with the system, the economists wrung their hands and racked their brains and called upon the spirit of Adam Smith, but could offer neither diagnosis or remedy.

“The worst that Marx had claimed was that the system would destroy itself; what Hobson suggested was that it might destroy the world.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter VII, The Underworld of Economics, p. 188
Contexto: The book was called Imperialism; it was a devastating volume. For here was the most important and searing criticism which had ever been levied against the profit system. The worst that Marx had claimed was that the system would destroy itself; what Hobson suggested was that it might destroy the world. He saw the process of imperialism as a relentless and restless tendency of capitalism to rescue itself from a self-imposed dilemma, a tendency that necessarily involved foreign commercial conquest and that thereby inescapably involved a constant risk of war. No more profound moral indictment of capitalism had ever been posed.

“Nothing could be further from the truth.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter II, The Economic Revolution, p. 15
Contexto: It may strike us as odd that the idea of gain is a relatively modern one; we are schooled to believe that man is essentially an acquisitive creature and that left to himself he will behave as any self-respecting businessman would. The profit motive, we are constantly being told, is as old as man himself.
Nothing could be further from the truth.

“Unlike modern man, who dreams of the world he will make, pre-modern man dreamed of the world he left.”

Fuente: The Future As History (1960), Chapter I, Part 3, The Future as the Mirror of the Past, p. 19

“It is from the scope and wisdom of the economists of the past that we must reap the knowledge with which to face the future.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter XI, Beyond the Economic Revolution, p. 317

“But like Marx, Veblen badly underestimated the capacity of a democratic system to correct its own excesses.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter VIII, Thorstein Veblen, p. 233

“To one American family out of four, the idea of capitalism as a benign system of comfort, dignity, and personal advance is only a myth, or worse, a bitter mockery.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter X, The Modern World, p. 281

“But while Ricardo, the economist, walked like a god (although he was a modest and retiring person), Malthus was relegated to a lower status.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter IV, Parson Malthus and David Ricardo, p. 77

“Nobody wanted this commercialization of life.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter II, The Economic Revolution, p. 21

“The total amount of electric power generated by India would not suffice to light up New York City.”

Fuente: The Future As History (1960), Chapter II, Part 5, The Terrible Ascent, p. 81

“If an economy in the doldrums could drift indefinitely, the price of government inaction might be graver by far than the consequences of bold unorthodoxy.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter IX, John Maynard Keynes, p. 269

“Very few of the heroes of the Golden Age of American finance had much interest in the solid realities of what underlay their structure of stocks and bonds and credits.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter VIII, Thorstein Veblen, p. 224

“The Wealth of Nations may not be an original book, but it is unquestionably a masterpiece.”

Robert L. Heilbroner libro The Worldly Philosophers

Fuente: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter III, Adam Smith, p. 42

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