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dc.contributor.authorBarnett II, William
dc.contributor.authorBlock, Walter
dc.date.accessioned2016-06-07T07:01:34Z
dc.date.available2016-06-07T07:01:34Z
dc.date.issued2010
dc.identifier.issn1311-9206
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10610/2255
dc.description.abstractMathematics has proven so helpful in the physical sciences such as physics that it has been improperly applied to economics. The dismal science studies purposeful human action, while purpose in the hard sciences is properly dismissed as anthropomorphic. The present paper takes the demand curve as a case in point. It demonstrates that this tool of analysis is fundamentally flawed in that it violates its own economic assumption of ceteris paribus, and also the mathematical requirement that only the proper number of variables may vary along a given graph in two-dimensional spacebg_BG
dc.language.isoenbg_BG
dc.publisherАИ "Ценов"bg_BG
dc.subjectDemand curvesbg_BG
dc.subjectconsumer behaviorbg_BG
dc.subjectmathematical economicsbg_BG
dc.subjectmarginal rate of substitutionbg_BG
dc.subjectindifferencebg_BG
dc.titleTHE ANTIMATHEMATICALITY OF DEMAND CURVESbg_BG
dc.typeArticlebg_BG


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