Geri Git   ForumSinsi - 2006 Yılından Beri > Eğitim - Öğretim - Dersler - Genel Bilgiler > Biyografiler

Yeni Konu Gönder Yanıtla
 
Konu Araçları
hayatı, hicks, john

John Hicks Hayatı

Eski 10-21-2012   #1
Prof. Dr. Sinsi
Varsayılan

John Hicks Hayatı




John Hicks

I was born in 1904 at Warwick, England, where my father was a journalist on a local newspaper I was educated at Clifton College (1917-22) and at Balliol College, Oxford (1922-26), an expensive education financed by mathematical scholarships Thus, during my school days, and in my first year at Oxford, I was a mathematical specialist; to the mathematical training I received at Clifton, in particular, I owe a great debt But I was not contented with mathematics; I had interests in literature and in history which I needed to satisfy My move (in 1923) to "Philosophy, Politics and Economics", the "new school" just being started at Oxford, was, however, not a success I finished with a second-class degree, and no adequate qualification in any of the subjects I had studied

Economists, in those days, were very scarce, so I did pick up a temporary lecturership at the London School of Economics and managed to get continued I started as a labour economist, doing descriptive work on industrial relations, but, gradually, I moved over to the analytical side Then I found that my mathematics, by that time almost forgotten, could be revived, and were sufficient to cope with what anyone (then) used in economics By 1930, when the economics department at the London School got a new lease of life under Lionel Robbins, I had found my feet "How wonderful it must have been in those days, when such things could be picked up with so little trouble", my students have said to me since They were picked up in discussion, with Robbins and Friedrich von Hayek, with Roy Allen and Nicholas Kaldor, with Abba Lerner and with Richard Sayers - and with Ursula Webb, who, in 1935, became my wife

By 1935, I had got so much that I needed to go away to put it together Thus, when an opportunity arose for moving, to a university lecturership at Cambridge (and Fellowship of Gonville and Caius College), I took it My years at Cambridge (1935-38) were mainly occupied in writing Value and Capital which was based on the work I had done in London, so I was not in a state to learn very much from association with Cambridge economists From 1938 to 1946 I was Professor at the University of Manchester It was there that I did my main work on welfare economics, with its application to social accounting In 1946 I returned to Oxford, first as a research fellow of Nuffield College (1946-52), then as Drummond Professor of Political Economy (1952-65), and finally as a research fellow of All Souls College (1965-71)

During these latter years, I have made contributions to several branches of theoretical economics I have written on money and on international trade, as well as on growth and fluctuations I have also done some small pieces of applied economics, especially in relation to problems of "developing" countries, several of which I have visited in company with my wife, much of whose work has been in that field Thus, in 1950, I was a member of a Revenue Allocation Commission in Nigeria, and in 1954, we both of us made an enquiry into the finances of Jamaica I have been reluctant to pronounce on larger issues of practical economics since I am convinced that one should not pronounce unless one knows the facts; and to keep abreast of changing facts on a world, or even on a nation scale, is more than can be done by one whose main concern is with principles A mere familiarity with statistics that have been prepared and digested by others is not sufficient

We now live in the country (Porch House, Blockley, Gloucestershire) but spend a part of each week in Oxford, where we continue to do a little teaching

I became a Fellow of the British Academy in 1942; a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy in 1948, of the Accademia dei Lincei, Italy, in 1952, and of the American Academy in 1958 I am an honorary fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford, since 1958 and of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, since 1971 I was President of the Royal Economic Society, 1960-62, and was knighted in 1964 I am an honorary doctor of several British Universities (Glasgow, Manchester, Leicester, East Anglia and Warwick) as well as of the Technical University of Lisbon I was made (in 1971) an honorary Senator of the University of Vienna

From Nobel Lectures, Economics 1969-1980, Editor Assar Lindbeck, World Scientific Publishing Co, Singapore, 1992

This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures To cite this document, always state the source as shown above



Alıntı Yaparak Cevapla
 
Üye olmanıza kesinlikle gerek yok !

Konuya yorum yazmak için sadece buraya tıklayınız.

Bu sitede 1 günde 10.000 kişiye sesinizi duyurma fırsatınız var.

IP adresleri kayıt altında tutulmaktadır. Aşağılama, hakaret, küfür vb. kötü içerikli mesaj yazan şahıslar IP adreslerinden tespit edilerek haklarında suç duyurusunda bulunulabilir.

« Önceki Konu   |   Sonraki Konu »


forumsinsi.com
Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
ForumSinsi.com hakkında yapılacak tüm şikayetlerde ilgili adresimizle iletişime geçilmesi halinde kanunlar ve yönetmelikler çerçevesinde en geç 1 (Bir) Hafta içerisinde gereken işlemler yapılacaktır. İletişime geçmek için buraya tıklayınız.