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Book reviews for "Hunt,_E._K." sorted by average review score:

The History of Black Business : The Coming of America's Largest African-American-Owned Businesses
Published in Hardcover by Knowledge Express Company (1999)
Authors: Martin K. Hunt and Jacqueline E. Hunt
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A inspiring view on how black business really got started
An excellent account of how black business and black businessmen and women were able to create business empires in a society that set strong boundaries against them. An must read for all Americans interested in the complete evolution of American business!


Property and prophets : the evolution of economic institutions and ideologies
Published in Unknown Binding by Harper & Row (1978)
Author: E. K. Hunt
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more leftist propaganda
this book is exactly what you would expect of a left-wing self appointed intellectual. the book paints a picture of capitalism as an evil force out to destroy the world. to do so, the author uses the typical scare tactics, half-truths, lies, misquoted authors and thinkers, and his own bizarre facts and fallacies. in doing so, this guy tries to act original, and wants us to think that he has his own ideas, but in attempting to do so just sounds like he's talking down to us common dumb people in true al gore fashion. of particular note is his insistance that mercantilism and capitalism are the same economic system, which is simply stupid.

Critique is a Good Thing
This book provides an alternative view of the nature of capitalism. Economics is the lap dog of capitalist ideology. This work provides both an alternative approach as well as historical truths and information that help the reader better understand both economics and capitalism.

A Critical Perspective On Capitalism:
Hunt's penetrating vision delivers both the history and the ideas, which have shaped our world. This book is of interest to those well read in economic theory as well as those seeking an introduction to how both its defenders and critics have viewed capitalism. Hunt explains the ideas of great economists like Smith, Ricardo, Malthus, Marx, Veblen and Keynes while insightfully describing the birth and continued evolution of capitalism. While Heilbroner's The Worldly Philosophers elevates the economist as the center of attention Hunt's Property and Prophets returns the emphasis to the arguments for and against capitalism.
At the dawn of the 21st century we find ourselves in the midst of a new wave of globalization that has resurrected centuries old debates over the efficacy of markets; those debates are described in this book. Those struggling to put people over profits should reconnect with the centuries of ideological struggle that preceded them and make Hunt's critical perspective required reading.


History of Economic Thought: A Critical Perspective
Published in Paperback by M.E.Sharpe (2002)
Author: E. K. Hunt
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Pseduo-science
If ever the science of economics was raised from it's dismal beginnings by powerful prose and concise critics, this book surely does not add to effort. Rather, Hunt drivels on for pages about Marx's moral and philosophical complaints, while Smith, the founder of economics receives hardly a nod. This book attempts to critique by ignoring the best arguments of it's subject, then proceeds to propogandize the reader with no mention of competing views. The author's floundering is less critical and helpful in the history of economics and more a manifesto of philosophical tunnel vision.

Should the author choose to honestly revise this book, it's benefit to students and the economic field will be found in a deep and penetrating treatment of an entire history. Critical views and competing views of each figure and doctrine would abound on its pages.

As it stands now, it's a mixed attempt at a call for revolution, a philosophical manifesto, and most deceivingly, a sorry excuse for a so called "critical" history.

Strong on Some Points - But an Unfair Treatment Overall
This book is subtitled "A Critical Perspective"; I think "A Biased Perspective" would have been much more fitting.

Mr. Hunt, a leading theorist on Marxian economics, has compiled a survey of the greatest economic thinkers since Adam Smith. He digs into this rich history with a sharp realism, seeking to explain the motivations behind today's neoclassical tradition. At many points he is insightful. But ultimately, he fails to consider his own motivations in writing the book. The result is a very one-sided analysis of a dynamic subject, which leaves the reader with a bitter aftertaste in the mouth.

The primary methodology Hunt employs is Critical Realism. He seeks to debunk the theories of those in the neoclassical tradition by attacking them personally. It does not make for a very convincing analysis. First of all, Hunt is very uneven in where he applies his scalpel. Writers such as Bastait, Malthus, Riccardo, and J.B. Clark are supposedly "discredited" by their class sympathies, writers in the Marxian tradition (and Marx in particular) are incredulously excused.

When Hunt does engage his opponent on a theoretical level, he is much less than fair. He tends to set up hollow straw-men as his targets, strike them with an obtuse and unwieldy club, and declare himself the victor. The subtleties and complexities a serious theoretician enjoys are nowhere to be found in Hunt's "critical" analysis.

To point out these problems is not to say that Hunt's book is of no value. It absolutely is. In the places where Hunt shines, he does an excellent job - offering broad and historical perspectives on why economics is the way it is today, and how it could be different. The reader is bound to walk away with a much more critical and thoughtful perspective of modern capitalism.

Nonetheless, this does not excuse the serious problems of bias this book contains. A person interested the subject would do better to search out a more objective introduction and then to return to Hunt's book for a taste of the radicals' perspective. I give this book three stars due to its mix of the good and the bad.

The Truth is out about Neoclassical Economics, its bunk.
E.K. Hunt's book provided an excellent as well as indepth portrayal of the development of economic thought. The book explains in throrough detail the various points of origin for economic theory and the two roads that have been taken most prevalently since the time of Adam Smith. The strength of the book lies in its analysis of modern mainstream theory and the documentation of its shortcomings. E.K. Hunt exposes the weaknesses of mainstream economics while at the same time offering an explanation for its continued study in the face of its theoretical inaccuracies. Mainstream economics carries on because it is on ideological friendly terms with the existing economic system. Regardless of the flaws in mainstream theory, and in capitalism in general, the continued reproduction of the economic system relies on the ability of those "scientists," whose responsibility it is to study the system, to provide a theoretical framework consistent with the reigning system. Without a scientific basis for its defense, the economic system and the economic elites benefitting from the system would have a hard time defending the results of a much less than perfect market economy. In the future I suggest reviewers of this book take the time to closely analyze the functioning of the capitalist economy before writing a review based solely on a seminar class. However, for many I suppose ignorance is bliss. Thank goodness E.K. Hunt doesn't view the world from the perspective of one's head in sand.


Atlas of Orthopedic Pathology
Published in Hardcover by W B Saunders Co (15 October, 2002)
Authors: Lester E. Wold, Claus-Peter, Md Adler, Franklin H., Md Sim, K. Krishnan, MD Unni, and Sue A. Hunt
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A Critique of Economic Theory: Selected Readings;
Published in Paperback by Viking Press (1973)
Author: E. K., Comp. Hunt
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Economics
Published in Paperback by Harpercollins College Div (1990)
Authors: E. K. Hunt and H. J. Sherman
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Economics : an introduction to traditional and radical views
Published in Unknown Binding by Harper & Row ()
Author: E. K. Hunt
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Explorations in Political Economy
Published in Hardcover by Rowman & Littlefield Publishing (28 December, 1990)
Authors: Rajani K. Kanth and E.K. Hunt
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History of Economic Thought
Published in Hardcover by Harpercollins College Div (1999)
Author: E. K. Hunt
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Property and Prophets
Published in Paperback by Harpercollins College Div (1990)
Author: E. K. Hunt
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