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3 Graphics Chronologies

A three page document that was part of Warfield’s collection for his Economics Research studies. Includes “Lives and Textbooks of the Five Predominant Authors of Economics Texts” which is a graphic time line from 1723 to the present with the names of Smith, Ricard, Marshall, Mill and Samuelson, along with their major book titles. Another table titled "Economists" lists names of 41 men whose life spans are inserted in a time chart table beginning in…

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DAVID RICARDO ANALYSIS

A summary of the work of David Ricardo, who preceded Adam Smith in his studies of economic conditions. This was the first, or one of the first, of what Warfield planned would be a complete set of writings on individual economists. One of several short papers Warfield created for his Economics Research Studies. Paper should include table which displays in graphic form the "Relationships" between the "Elements" in Ricardo's studies.
Warfield alphabetically lists, in double columns, the names of dozens of men and women. At the beginning of the list he has a subsection, headed by the caption: "The Five Books That Reigned from 1776 to 1976" where he give full dates and names of 5 men and the titles of their books (Smith, Ricardo, Mill, Marshall, Samuelson). One of several short papers Warfield created for his Economics Research Studies.
A graphical timeline with the names of five economists next to their five book titles. The five authors treated in this table are Adam Smith, David Ricardo, John Stuart Mill, Alfred Marshall and Paul Samuelson. One of several short papers Warfield created for his Economics Research Studies.
An unfinished table that displays the names, origins and persons responsible for the creation of the world’s largest and most powerful banking/finance (World Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF), Federal Reserve, etc).
A list of 118 problems or options Warfield compiled from researching an article by John Hathaway titled "The Investment Case for Gold" which appeared on GoldEagle.com in 2002. One of several short papers Warfield created for his Economics Research Studies.
A four-page list of economic terms and names. Appears to be an attempt to create a classification system of economic philosophies. The source is New School for Social Research. One of several short papers Warfield created for his Economics Research Studies.

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Case Study Format

As part of his effort to define economic schools of thought, Warfield created this template for use when reading ad studying individual books or articles. It identifies topics/criteria to look for in each document as a way of systematically comparing it with others.
A summary of 15th century economic theory that focuses on the influential figures from that era, their guiding philosophies, problems associated with optimizing their philosophies, and the solutions developed to ameliorate the problems. One of two “case studies” Warfield wrote using his ESOT template to guide the research findings in a manner that could be somewhat calibrated. One of several short papers Warfield created for his Economics Research Studies. See also, “Case Study Format” and…
A profile and summary of the work of Richard Catillon, the “father of economics.” The is the second of only two “case studies” Warfield authored using his “ESOT” template to guide and organize research findings in a manner that could be somewhat calibrated. One of several short papers Warfield created for his Economics Research Studies. See also, “Case Study Format” and “Case Study for an Economics School of Thought (ESOT) 5.”
A study of the economist Jacques Turgot’s writing. Warfield attempts to sort the elements of Turgot’s thinking into six or seven identifiable categories. One of several short papers Warfield created for his Economics Research Studies.
A study of the 16th century economist Francois Quesnay using Warfield’s template “profile.” One of several short papers Warfield created for his Economics Research Studies.
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