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MALTHUS GLOBAL
Thomas Sowell (1930– )
Intellectual and Historical Profile Thomas Sowell stands as one of the most influential contemporary thinkers in political economy, known for his rigorous empiricism, institutional realism, and ability to translate complex economic mechanisms into clear, operational insights. Writing from the late twentieth century into the present, Sowell’s work spans a period marked by the Cold War, the rise of globalisation, the expansion of welfare states, and the increasing politicisatio

Cristian Parra
12 hours ago3 min read
Friedrich A. Hayek (1899–1992)
Intellectual and Historical Profile Friedrich A. Hayek developed his intellectual project in the shadow of twentieth‑century totalitarian experiments, the rise of centrally planned economies, and the institutional ruptures that followed two world wars. He wrote as Europe confronted the practical and moral failures of authoritarian planning and as democracies struggled to rebuild credible market institutions. Hayek combined rigorous theoretical analysis with a sustained normat

Cristian Parra
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Milton Friedman (1912–2006)
Intellectual and Historical Profile Milton Friedman’s intellectual career unfolded against the defining macroeconomic crises of the twentieth century: the Great Depression, the post‑war reconstruction era, and the stagflation of the 1970s. Trained in rigorous empirical methods and price‑theoretic reasoning, Friedman combined theoretical clarity with policy engagement. He challenged prevailing Keynesian prescriptions by emphasising the primacy of monetary stability, the limits

Cristian Parra
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Jean‑Baptiste Say (1767–1832)
Intellectual and Historical Profile Jean‑Baptiste Say wrote and practised during a turbulent and formative period in French and European history: the aftermath of the French Revolution, the Napoleonic wars, the restoration of political order, and the early phases of industrial modernisation. Born into an era of institutional reconstruction, Say combined practical commercial experience with systematic economic reflection. His principal work, A Treatise on Political Economy (f

Cristian Parra
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Thomas Robert Malthus (1766-1834)
Intellectual and Historical Profile Thomas Robert Malthus wrote at a historical inflection point defined by rapid population growth, recurring agricultural crises, and the uneven social effects of early industrialisation. His An Essay on the Principle of Population (first edition, 1798) introduced a systematic, empirically informed framework that linked economic output to underlying socioeconomic conditions—household formation, subsistence constraints, labour markets and inst

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John Stuart Mill (1806-1873)
Intellectual and Historical Profile John Stuart Mill wrote at the intellectual and social fulcrum of nineteenth‑century industrial modernity. His formative years and scholarly career unfolded against rapid urbanisation, the mechanisation of production, the rise of factory labour, and the attendant social dislocations—public health crises, class conflict, and widening inequalities—that accompanied Britain’s transformation into an industrial powerhouse. Trained in rigorous log

Cristian Parra
13 hours ago3 min read
David Ricardo (1772-1823)
Intellectual and Historical Profile David Ricardo developed his core theoretical contributions against a backdrop of intense economic turbulence and political contestation. The Napoleonic Wars (c. 1803–1815) disrupted European trade, raised food prices during wartime scarcity, and left Britain with large public debts and volatile markets—conditions that sharpened contemporary debates about trade policy, fiscal capacity, and social stability. In the immediate postwar period, f

Cristian Parra
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Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)
Intellectual and Historical Profile Thomas Hobbes emerged as a formative political thinker amid the convulsions of seventeenth‑century England: civil war, regicide, regime change, and the breakdown of customary authority. His Leviathan is not an abstract moral tract but a programmatic response to social disintegration. Hobbes begins from a stark empirical premise: in the absence of reliable institutions, human interactions tend toward competition, insecurity, and violent conf

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Adam Smith (1723-1790)
Intellectual and Historical Profile Adam Smith emerged from the Scottish Enlightenment, a period of intellectual vibrancy characterised by advances in philosophy, science, jurisprudence, and political economy. Writing during the early Industrial Revolution, Smith observed the transformation of agrarian societies into commercial and manufacturing economies. The rise of mechanisation, the expansion of global trade networks, and the emergence of new labour systems created unprec

Cristian Parra
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John Locke (1632-1704)
Intellectual and Historical Profile John Locke emerged as the defining intellectual force of the seventeenth century, a period marked by civil war, monarchical collapse, religious fragmentation, and the gradual consolidation of constitutional government in England. His work was not produced in academic isolation: it was forged in the midst of political instability, contested sovereignty, and the urgent need to articulate a framework capable of restraining arbitrary power whil

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