内容説明
This text examines tensions in classical political economy by describing and analyzing changes in J.S. Mill's economic and religious thought late in life, and assesses the influence of Mill's disciplines on these shifts. Mill's followers, surprisingly, were divided into two opposing camps. Influenced by the "heterodox" group opponents of Ricardian political economy and by pressing political concerns, Mill modified his principles in ways he would not earlier have countenanced. This resulted in inconsistencies and evasions in his final essays, which greatly upset the "orthodox" contingent.
著者について
JEFF LIPKES was born and raised in Los Angeles and was educated at U. C. Berkeley and Princeton, where he received his PhD in history in 1995. He teaches at the University of South Florida and lives in Tampa.