→ BaumolWilliamJ. (1974a) “The transformation of values: What Marx really meant (An interpretation),”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 12, pp. 51–62.
2.
BaumolWilliamJ., (1974b), “Comment,”ibid., pp. 74–75.
3.
BrentanoLujo (1870). On the history and development of gilds & the origins of trade unions. Jena: Diederichs.
4.
BriganteJohnE. (1950). “The feasibility dispute: Determination of war production objectives for 1942 and 1943.” (Washington, D.C.: Committee on Public Administration Cases).
5.
→ BronfenbrennerMartin (1973a). “Samuelson Marx, and their latest critics.”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 11, pp. 58–63.
6.
BronfenbrennerMartin. (1973b). “Comment on Robinson's ‘Samuelson and Marx’.”Ibid., pp. 1367.
7.
DorfmanRobertPaulA. SamuelsonRobertA. Solow (1958). Linear Programming and Economic Analysis. New York: McGraw-Hill.
8.
FrischRagnar (1951). “Some personal reminiscences on a great man.” in HarrisSeymour (1951).
9.
HansenAlvin (1941). Fiscal policy and business cycles. New York: W.W. Norton.
10.
HanuschHorst (2007) The Elgar Companion to Neo-Schumpeterian Economics. Aldershot (UK): Edward Elgar.
11.
→ HollanderSamuel (1980). “On Professor Samuelson's canonical classical model of political economy.”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 18, pp. 559–74.
12.
Kapuria-FormanVibhaPerlmanMark (1995). “An economic historian's economist: Remembering Simon Kuznets.”Economic Journal, vol. 105, pp. 1524–47.
13.
KhachaturovTigranS. (1983). “Comments on Professor Samuelson's ‘The world economy at century's end.” In TsuruShigeto (ed.) (1983), pp. 89–94.
14.
→ LernerAbbaP. (1972). “A note on understanding the marxian notion of exploitation.”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 10, pp. 50–1.
15.
MachlupFritz (1952). “Issues in methodology American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings, vol. 42. pp. 34, 69–78.
16.
→ MariettaMorganPerlmanMark (2000) “The Uses of Authority in Economics: Shared Intellectual Frameworks as the Foundation of Persuasion”The American Journal of Economics & Sociology59,2:151–89.
17.
MarshallAlfred (1923, 4th edition). Industry and trade: A study of industrial technique and business organization, and of their influences on the conditions of various classes and nations. London: Macmillan.
18.
MitchellClairWesley (1967, 1969). Types of economic theory: From mercantilism to institutionalism. New York: Augustus Kelley.
19.
MorgansternOskar (1972). “Thirteen critical points in contemporary economic theory: An interpretation,”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 10, pp. 1163–89.
20.
→ MorishimaMichio (1974). “The fundamental marxian theorem: A reply to Samuelson.”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 12, pp. 71–74.
21.
PerlmanMark (1991). “On the editing of American economic journals: Some comments on the earlier journals and the lessons suggested.”Economic Notes, vol. 20, pp. 159–72.
22.
PerlmanMark. (1993). “Series editor's note,” in Tsuru, Shigeto (1993), pp. 267–70.
23.
PerlmanMark. (2001). Editing economics: Essays in honour of Mark Perlman. Edited by Hank LimUngsuh Kenneth ParkHarcourtGeoffrey. London and New York: Routledge.
24.
PerlmanMark. (unpublished). “Schumpeter's views on methodology: Their source and their evolution.” See Hanusch, Horst (2007).
25.
PerlmanMarkMariettaMorgan (2005) “The Politics of Social Accounting: Public Goals and the Evolution of the National Accounts in Germany, Britain, and the United States”Review of Political Economy, vol. 17, pp. 211–30.
26.
PerlmanMarkCharlesR. McCann (1998). Pillars of economic understanding: Ideas & traditions. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
27.
PribramKarl (1984). A History of Economic Reasoning. Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press.
28.
PuttersmithK. (ed.) (2002). Paul Samuelson & the foundations of modern economics. New Brunswick, NJ: Transactions Publisher.
29.
RobbinsThe Lord [Lionel] (1955). “Schumpeter's History of Economic Analysis.”Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol. 44, pp. 1–22.
30.
→ RobinsonJoan (1973). “Samuelson and Marx.”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 11, pp. 1367.
31.
SamuelsonPaul (1947) Foundations of economic analysis. Harvard Economic Studies, vol. 80. Cambridge, Harvard University Press.
32.
SamuelsonPaul. ([1948], 2004). Economics: An introductory analysis. New York: McGraw-Hill.
33.
→ SamuelsonPaul. (1971). “Understanding the marxian notion of exploitation: Called transformation problem between marxian value and competitive prices.”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 9, pp. 399–431.
34.
SamuelsonPaul. (1972). “The economics of Marx: An ecumenical Reply.”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 10, pp. 51–7.
35.
SamuelsonPaul. (1973a). “Reply [to Bronfenbrenner] on marxian matters.”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 11, pp. 64–8.
36.
→ SamuelsonPaul. (1973b). “Comment [on Robinson's ‘Samuelson and Marx’].”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 11, pp. 1367.
37.
→ SamuelsonPaul. (1974a). “Insight and detour in the theory of exploitation: A reply to Baumol.”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 12, pp. 62–70.
38.
SamuelsonPaul. (1974b). “Rejoinder: Merlin unclothed, A final word.”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 12, pp. 75–77.
39.
SamuelsonPaul. (1974c). “COMPLEMENTARITY: An essay on the 40th anniversary of the Hicks-Allen revolution in demand theory.”Ibid. vol. 12, pp. 1255–89.
40.
→ SamuelsonPaul. (1977). “St. Petersburg paradoxes: Defanged, dissected, and historically described.”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 15, pp. 24–55.
41.
→ SamuelsonPaul. (1980). “Noise and signal in debates among Classical Economists.”Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 18, pp. 575–78.
42.
SamuelsonPaul. (1983). “The world at century's end.” In Tsuru, Shigeto (1983), pp. 58–77.
43.
SamuelsonPaul. (2001). “Where Ricardo and Mill confirm and rebut arguments by mainstream economists supporting globalization.”Journal of Economic Perspectives, vol. 18, pp. 135–46.
44.
SamuelsonPaulASolowRobertM.DorfmanRobert (1958). Linear programming and economic analysis, (see Dorman, Robert).
45.
SchumpeterJoseph (1952) Memorial Volume. See Hanson, Seymour (1951).
46.
SchumpeterJoseph. ([1954] 1994). History of economic analysis. With a new introduction by Mark Perlman. New York: Oxford University Press.
47.
StolperWolfgang (1994). Joseph Alois Stolper: The public life of a private man. Princeton: University of Princeton Press.
48.
TinbergenJan (1951). “Schumpeter and quantitative research in economics.” See Harris, Seymour (1951).
49.
TsuruShigeto (Editor for the International Economic Association) (1983). Human resources, employment and development. Volume 1. Proceedings of the International Economic Association held in Mexico City, 1980, New York: St. Martin's Press.
50.
TsuruShigeto. (1993). Japan's capitalism: Creative defeat and beyond. New York: Cambridge University Press.