I haven't done a survey, but I think most textbooks are much less
careful than you'd want them to be.

On 2/16/06, Sandwichman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In correspondence with a right-wing libertarian, he mentioned that he would
> defend 'til the cows come home the proposition that "human wants and desires
> are unlimited."
>
>  I corrected him, pointing out that wants and desires could only be
> unlimited _in principle_. To assert that they are actually unlimited ignores
> the basic condition that each desire must have a duration.
>
>  But it got me to thinking that I usually hear that trite piece of economic
> wisdom in pretty much the vulgar form my interlocuter presented it.
>
>  So my question is: do economic textbooks usually/always/seldom make the in
> principle distinction? Is there a "canonical" statement of this proposition?
>
>  The Sandwichman
>
>
>  ________________________________
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>
>


--
Jim Devine / Bust Big Brother Bush!

"There are no whole truths; all truths are half-truths. It is trying
to treat them as whole truths that plays the devil." -- Alfred North
Whitehead

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