000 01233cam a22002291 4500
008 750507s1966 enka bs 000 e eng
040 _aDLC
_cFJUNF
050 0 0 _aHB74.M3
_bS74
082 _a330.015'1
_bSTO
100 1 _aStone, Richard,
245 1 0 _aMathematics in the Social Sciences and Other Essays/
260 _aLondon:
_bChapman & Hall,
_c1966.
300 _axiii, 291 p.:ill,
504 _aBibliography: p. [283]-291.
520 _aIt is now generally agreed that mathematical methods are necessary both at the theoretical level, to formulate problems precisely, to draw conclusions from postulates and to gain insight into the workings of complicated processes, and at the applied level, to measure variables, to estimate parameters and to organize the elaborate calculations involved in reaching empirical results. The seventeen essays collected in this book are all illustrations of the belief in this principle. Most of the examples in this literature relate to economics, and more particularly to the computable model of the British economy.
590 _ane 20/03/2018
591 _aLoans
650 0 _aEconomics, Mathematical.
650 0 _aSocial Sciences.
942 _2ddc
_cBOOK
949 _a330.015'1 STO
999 _c7524
_d7524