MARC状态:审校 文献类型:西文图书 浏览次数:20
- 题名/责任者:
- Pliny's Roman economy : natural history, innovation, and growth / Richard Saller.
- 出版发行项:
- Princeton, New Jersey : Princeton University Press, 2023.
- ISBN:
- 9780691229560
- 载体形态项:
- viii, 198 pages ; 23 cm.
- 个人责任者:
- Saller, Richard P., author.
- 个人名称主题:
- Pliny,-the Elder.-Naturalis historia.
- 论题主题:
- Economics-Rome-History.
- 地理名称主题:
- Rome-Economic conditions.
- 中图法分类号:
- F154.69
- 书目附注:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- 内容附注:
- Proxies for Economic Performance in the Roman Empire -- Excursus: Morgantina -- Pliny's Purpose, Audience, and Method -- Excursus: Pliny on Remedies for Rabies -- Parens Natura and Smithian Growth -- Innovation and Economic Growth in the Natural History -- Excursus: Aulus Gellius on Pliny and the Culture Of Authoritative Knowledge -- Pliny's Economic Observations and Reasoning -- "Utility" and the Afterlife of the Natural History -- Excursus: Fulling as an Illustration Comparing Pliny's Natural History And -- Chambers' Cyclopaedia -- Conclusion.
- 摘要附注:
- "Recent works by economic historians of early modern Europe have argued for a link between encyclopedias of the 18th century and the developments culminating in the Industrial Revolution. Diderot and D'Alembert's great Encyclopedie aimed to disseminate useful knowledge for productive growth and was one of the most visible contributions to what economic historian Joel Mokyr has labelled a "culture of growth." While the Ancient Romans didn't have anything like these encyclopedias, they did have its very popular and acknowledged ancestor, the thirty-seven books of Pliny's Natural History. Much has been written about Pliny's view of nature, his scientific thought, his ideology of empire, and so on, but there has been no comparable effort to probe Pliny's economic views and the impact, if any, of his history on Roman economic growth. In Pliny's Roman Economy, eminent Roman historian Richard Saller aims to bring together the economic observations and instances of financial reasoning scattered throughout the Natural History. Taken together, they do not amount to a discipline of "economics," but, Saller argues they do provide insights into Pliny's views about different forms of production and commerce, about labor and agency, about price formation and profitability, about investment and consumption and about technology. Combined with archaeological and other evidence, Pliny's work can also provide us with one of our best textual pictures of the working of the Roman economy"--
全部MARC细节信息>>