Thorstein Veblen/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Thorstein Veblen, or pages that link to Thorstein Veblen or to this page or whose text contains "Thorstein Veblen".
- Oswald Veblen: (1880 – 1960) An American mathematician whose work found application in atomic physics and who helped found the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, NJ. [e]
Bot-suggested topics
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- Economics: The analysis of the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services. [e]
- Efficiency Movement: Add brief definition or description
- History of economic thought: the historical development of economic thinking. [e]
- Howard Scott: (April 1, 1890–January 1, 1970) An engineer and founding member of the Technical Alliance and of Technocracy Inc.. [e]
- Middletown: Term meaning the average or typical American small city. [e]
- Progressive Era: The period of political, administrative and social reform that began in the 1890s and ended after World War I. [e]
- Simon Patten: An American economist and social theorist who made pioneering work in welfare economics and social services. [e]
- Social capital: Productive assets arising out of social relations, such as trust, cooperation, solidarity, social networks of relations and those beliefs, ideologies and institutions that contribute to production of goods. [e]
- Social class: The hierarchical distinctions between groups in societies or cultures. [e]
- Supply and demand: The explanation in economic theory of the factors that influence the supply of, and the demand for, goods and services; and of the market mechanisms by which they are reconciled. [e]
- Technical Alliance: Add brief definition or description
- Technocracy movement: A social movement that started in the United States of America in 1933 and promotes the application of science to society. [e]
- Technocracy: Rule of the skilled. A type of government composed of experts. [e]
- Veblen good: A product, the demand for which increases when its price increases because consumers obtain more satisfaction from more expensive products. [e]