Deirdre Nansen McCloskey

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Deirdre Nansen McCloskey


Born
in Ann Arbor, Michigan, The United States
September 11, 1942

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Deirdre Nansen McCloskey has been distinguished professor of economics and history and professor of English and communications at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She is the author of numerous books, including Bourgeois Equality: How Ideas, Not Capital or Institutions, Enriched the World.

Deirdre Nansen McCloskey isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.

“How Markets and Innovation Became Ethical and Then Suspect”

Deirdre McCloskey was the featured speaker at this Cato Institute forum, which can be viewed online or downloaded as an audio podcast.
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Published on June 24, 2013 13:01
Average rating: 3.97 · 3,170 ratings · 390 reviews · 60 distinct worksSimilar authors
Economical Writing

4.16 avg rating — 895 ratings — published 1999 — 12 editions
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Bourgeois Dignity: Why Econ...

4.12 avg rating — 409 ratings — published 2010 — 18 editions
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The Bourgeois Virtues: Ethi...

3.81 avg rating — 345 ratings — published 2006 — 19 editions
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Bourgeois Equality: How Ide...

4.19 avg rating — 253 ratings — published 2016 — 8 editions
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Crossing

3.65 avg rating — 218 ratings — published 1999 — 17 editions
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Why Liberalism Works: How T...

3.82 avg rating — 171 ratings — published 2019 — 10 editions
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The Rhetoric of Economics

3.92 avg rating — 158 ratings — published 1985 — 16 editions
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Leave Me Alone and I'll Mak...

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3.82 avg rating — 159 ratings — published 2020 — 7 editions
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The Secret Sins of Economics

3.67 avg rating — 89 ratings — published 2002 — 5 editions
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The Myth of the Entrepreneu...

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3.64 avg rating — 72 ratings — published 2020 — 3 editions
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More books by Deirdre Nansen McCloskey…
Quotes by Deirdre Nansen McCloskey  (?)
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“Nor during the Age of Innovation have the poor gotten poorer, as people are always saying. On the contrary, the poor have been the chief beneficiaries of modern capitalism. It is an irrefutable historical finding, obscured by the logical truth that the profits from innovation go in the first act mostly to the bourgeois rich.”
Deirdre N. McCloskey, Bourgeois Dignity: Why Economics Can't Explain the Modern World

“Virginia Woolf wrote famously, “About December 1910 human nature changed.” Well, one doubts it. What did change, and has been changing all through the closing decades of the 19th century, is that the intelligentsia became increasingly alienated from the bourgeois world from which it sprung, and wished to become something Higher. It wished to make novels difficult and technical – think of Woolf or Joyce – to keep them out of the hands of the uneducated and to elevate the intelligentsia to a new clerisy, a new aristocracy of the spirit. Similarly in painting, music, and philosophy. It wished to make everything difficult and technical, and it succeeded. [Economists Lawrence] Klein, [Paul] Samuelson, and [Jan] Tinbergen were middle-period modernists.

The vices of modernism come from the master vice of Pride, the vice so characteristic of an actual or wannabe aristocracy. It is prideful overreaching to think that social engineering can work, that a smart lad at a blackboard can outwit the wisdom of the world or the ages, that a piece of machinery like statistical significance can tell you how big or small a number is.”
Deirdre McCloskey

“The economy, like science or art, is more like an organism growing uncertainly toward the light than a steel machine repeating exactly today and tomorrow what it did yesterday.”
Deirdre N. McCloskey, Why Liberalism Works: How True Liberal Values Produce a Freer, More Equal, Prosperous World for All

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