Methodological Foundations: Between Conceptual Heritage and Admitted Limits
The exercise of assessing destroyed human capital—and it would be dishonest to deny that it raises genuine ethical as well as methodological questions—fits within an intellectual tradition whose genealogy must briefly be traced. Thomas C. Schelling, in his article The Life You Save May Be Your Own (The Public Interest, No. 15, Spring 1968, pp. 127–136), laid the theoretical groundwork for what would becom
Si vous avez déjà créé un compte, connectez-vous pour lire la suite de cet article. Pas encore de compte ? Inscrivez-vous