"Since economics deals with human beings, the problems of its scientific treatment involves fundamental problems of the relations between man and his world. From a rational or scientific point of view, all practically real problems are problems in economics. The problem of life is to utilize resources "economically," to make them go as far as possible in the production of desired results. The general theory of economics is therefore simply the rationale of life. - In so far as it has any rationale! The first question in regard to scientific economics is this question of how far life is rational, how far its problems reduce to the form of using given means to achieve given ends. Now this, we shall contend, is not very far; the scientific view of life is a limited and partial view; life is at bottom an exploration in the field of values, an attempt to discover values, rather than on the basis of knowledge of them to produce and enjoy them to the greatest possible extent. We strive to "know ourselves," to find out our real wants, more than to get what we want. This fact sets a first and most sweeping limitation to the conception of economics as a science."
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Economists from the United StatesCornell University alumniPeople from IllinoisUniversity of Chicago faculty
Original Language: English
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p. 97 (2009 edition); Lead paragraph
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Frank_Knight
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Frank Knight
(November 7, 1885 – April 15, 1972) was an American economist, who spent most of his career at the , where he became one of the founders of the .
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