Book contents
- Towards an Economics of Natural Equals
- Frontispiece
- Towards an Economics of Natural Equals
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Why the Virginia School of Political Economy Matters
- 2 James Buchanan and the Return to an Economics of Natural Equals
- 3 “Almost Wholly Negative”: An Early Reaction to the Virginia School
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 The Thomas Jefferson Center Proposal to the Ford Foundation
- 3.3 The Aftermath: Correspondence
- 3.4 The Methodological Defense
- 3.5 Conclusion
- Appendix 3.1 Thomas Jefferson Center for Studies in Political Economy, “Request for Financial Assistance,” May 1960
- Appendix 3.2 Ford Foundation, New York. Inter-Office Memorandum, Marian Chamberlain to Kermit Gordon, 11 August 1960
- Appendix 3.3 Warren Nutter to Ronald Coase, 31 August 1960
- Appendix 3.4 James Buchanan to Ronald Coase, 1 September 1960
- Appendix 3.5 [James Buchanan] “Memorandum of Conversation with Ford Foundation, 31 August 1960.” 1 September 1960
- Appendix 3.6 Ronald Coase to Kermit Gordon, 17 September 1960
- Appendix 3.7 Ford Foundation, New York. Inter-Office Memorandum, Oscar Harkavy to Kermit Gordon, 21 September 1960
- Appendix 3.8 Kermit Gordon to Ronald Coase, 7 October 1960
- Appendix 3.9 Ronald Coase to Kermit Gordon, 17 October 1960
- Appendix 3.10 James Buchanan to Kermit Gordon, 17 October 1960
- Appendix 3.11 Kermit Gordon to James Buchanan, 19 December 1960
- Appendix 3.12 James Buchanan to Donald O’Connell, 30 January 1961
- Appendix 3.13 James Buchanan to Donald O’Connell, 1 February 1961
- Appendix 3.14 Ronald Coase to Donald O’Connell, 24 May 1961
- Appendix 3.15 Ronald Coase. “Notes of my meeting with Mr. Kermit Gordon of the Ford Foundation on September 14th 1960,” 20 October 1961
- 4 “The Economics of Universal Education” and After: From Friedman to Rawls
- 5 Virginia Political Economy and Public Choice Economics
- 6 The Individuals and Their Connections
- 7 The Role of the Earhart Foundation in the Early Virginia School
- 8 The Virginia School and the Anti-democratic Right
- 9 Neoliberalism, the Virginia School, and the Geldard Report
- 10 Conclusion: Should the Virginia School be Restored?
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Appendix 3.4 - James Buchanan to Ronald Coase, 1 September 1960
from 3 - “Almost Wholly Negative”: An Early Reaction to the Virginia School
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2019
- Towards an Economics of Natural Equals
- Frontispiece
- Towards an Economics of Natural Equals
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Why the Virginia School of Political Economy Matters
- 2 James Buchanan and the Return to an Economics of Natural Equals
- 3 “Almost Wholly Negative”: An Early Reaction to the Virginia School
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 The Thomas Jefferson Center Proposal to the Ford Foundation
- 3.3 The Aftermath: Correspondence
- 3.4 The Methodological Defense
- 3.5 Conclusion
- Appendix 3.1 Thomas Jefferson Center for Studies in Political Economy, “Request for Financial Assistance,” May 1960
- Appendix 3.2 Ford Foundation, New York. Inter-Office Memorandum, Marian Chamberlain to Kermit Gordon, 11 August 1960
- Appendix 3.3 Warren Nutter to Ronald Coase, 31 August 1960
- Appendix 3.4 James Buchanan to Ronald Coase, 1 September 1960
- Appendix 3.5 [James Buchanan] “Memorandum of Conversation with Ford Foundation, 31 August 1960.” 1 September 1960
- Appendix 3.6 Ronald Coase to Kermit Gordon, 17 September 1960
- Appendix 3.7 Ford Foundation, New York. Inter-Office Memorandum, Oscar Harkavy to Kermit Gordon, 21 September 1960
- Appendix 3.8 Kermit Gordon to Ronald Coase, 7 October 1960
- Appendix 3.9 Ronald Coase to Kermit Gordon, 17 October 1960
- Appendix 3.10 James Buchanan to Kermit Gordon, 17 October 1960
- Appendix 3.11 Kermit Gordon to James Buchanan, 19 December 1960
- Appendix 3.12 James Buchanan to Donald O’Connell, 30 January 1961
- Appendix 3.13 James Buchanan to Donald O’Connell, 1 February 1961
- Appendix 3.14 Ronald Coase to Donald O’Connell, 24 May 1961
- Appendix 3.15 Ronald Coase. “Notes of my meeting with Mr. Kermit Gordon of the Ford Foundation on September 14th 1960,” 20 October 1961
- 4 “The Economics of Universal Education” and After: From Friedman to Rawls
- 5 Virginia Political Economy and Public Choice Economics
- 6 The Individuals and Their Connections
- 7 The Role of the Earhart Foundation in the Early Virginia School
- 8 The Virginia School and the Anti-democratic Right
- 9 Neoliberalism, the Virginia School, and the Geldard Report
- 10 Conclusion: Should the Virginia School be Restored?
- Select Bibliography
- Index
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Towards an Economics of Natural EqualsA Documentary History of the Early Virginia School, pp. 63 - 64Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020