profile
NNDB
This is a beta version of NNDB
Search: for

Paul Samuelson

Economist (15-May-1915 — 13-Dec-2009)

SUBJECT OF BOOKS


E. Cary Brow; Robert M. Solow. Paul Samuelson and Modern Economic Theory. New York: McGraw-Hill. 1983. 210pp.

K. Puttaswamaiah. Paul Samuelson and the Foundations of Modern Economics. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. 2002. 265pp.

Michael Szenberg, Aron A. Gottesman, and Lall Ramrattan. Paul A. Samuelson: On Being an Economist. New York: Jorge Pinto Books. 2005. 149pp.

Stanley Wong. The Foundations of Paul Samuelson's Revealed Preference Theory. London: Routledge & Paul. 1978. 148pp.


AUTHORITIES

Below are references indicating presence of this name in another database or other reference material. Most of the sources listed are encyclopedic in nature but might be limited to a specific field, such as musicians or film directors. A lack of listings here does not indicate unimportance -- we are nowhere near finished with this portion of the project -- though if many are shown it does indicate a wide recognition of this individual.

  1. NNDB [link]

  2. Encyclopaedia Britannica Online [link]

  3. Internet Movie Database [link]

  4. Public Information Research Namebase [link]

  5. Wikipedia [link]

  6. Encyclopedia of American Biography (p.981)

  7. 20th Century Culture: A Biographical Companion (p.672)

  8. International Dictionary of 20th Century Biography (p.623)

  9. Chambers Biographical Dictionary, 5th Edition (p.1292)

  10. Webster's American Biographies (p.915)

  11. Celebrity Register 4th Issue (p.443)

  12. Public Intellectuals: A Study in Decline (p.203)

  13. Cambridge Dictionary of American Biography (p.643)

  14. Hutchinson Paperback Dictionary of Biography (p.439)

  15. Biographical Dictionary of the Left (vol.1, pp.524-26)

  16. The Hutchinson Dictionary of Ideas (p.463)

  17. The World Almanac Biographical Dictionary (p.115)




Do you know something we don't?
Submit a correction or make a comment about this profile



Copyright ©2019 Soylent Communications