Dr Strangelove's game : a brief history of economic genius

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Dr Strangelove's game : a brief history of economic genius

Paul Strathern

(Penguin non-fiction)(Penguin books)

Penguin Books, 2002

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Note

Reprint. Originally published: Hamish Hamilton, 2001

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

An account of the lives, times and ideas of the great economists - men like Adam Smith, Karl Marx and John Maynard Keynes who were fascinating characters as well as influential thinkers. Strathern also introduces a host of lesser known figures whose theories were as eccentric as they were - medieval monks obsessed with the maths of gambling; crackpot academics; an alleged murderer who controlled France's finances; and, of course, Dr Strangelove himself - John von Neumann, the crippled, crazed genius who invented game theory. Paul Strathern uncovers the lives and ideas of the great philosophers of money against the backdrop of some of history's most turbulent events: the South Sea Bubble, the French and Russian Revolutions and the Crash of 1929. On the way he provides an account of the great, the good and the downright bad in economic theories. In fact, everything you ever wanted to know about economics, but were too afraid to ask.

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