Synopses & Reviews
Whether music's appeal to the senses detracts from or contributes to devotion is an important question for all religious traditions. This interdisciplinary, cross-cultural collection is intended as a first step towards a phenomenology of religious music. Topics range from the mystical strain
in Jewish liturgical music to music in the Theravada Buddhist heritage. Contributors include Lois Ibsen al Faruqi, Bruce B. Lawrence, John Ross Carter, and Donna Marie Wulff.
Synopsis
The Internet and mobile telephones have made everyone more aware than ever of the computer revolution and its effects on the economy and society. 'As Time Goes By' puts this revolution in the perspective of previous waves of technical change: steam-powered mechanization, electrification, and motorization. It argues for a theory of reasoned economic history which assigns a central place to these successive technological revolutions.
About the Author
Chris Freeman is Emeritus Professor at SPRU, University of Sussex. After studying at the London School of Economics, he later took up the position of Research Fellow at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, London (1959-66) before becoming Director of the Science Policy Research Unit at the University of Susex (1966-81). His most recent position was Visiting Professor at the University of Limburg in Maastricht (1986-96). He is the author of numerous books including 'The Economics of Industrial Innovation' (with L. Soete, Pinter, 1997); 'Work for All or Mass Unemployment: Computerised Technical Change into the 21st Century' (with L. Soete, Pinter, 1994); and 'Technology and Economic Performance: Lessons from Japan' (Pinter, 1987).
Francisco Louçã is Professor of Economics in the Faculty of Economics and Management at the ISEG, Lisbon. He obtained his Ph.D. in Economics at the University of Lisbon under the supervision of Chris Freeman, subsequently publishing his thesis in both English and Portuguese ('Turbulence in Economics', Edward Elgar 1997). In 1999 he was elected Member of Parliament in Portugal, and serves in the Economic and Budgetary Commission.
Table of Contents
Part I: History and Economics Introduction: The Fundamental Things Apply
1. Restless Clio: A Story of the Economic Historians' Assessment of History in Economics
2. Schumpeter's Plea for Reasoned History
3. Nikolai Kondratiev: A New Approach to History and Statistics
4. The Strange Attraction of Tides and Waves
Conclusions: A Theory of Reasoned History
Part II: Successive Industrial Revolutions
Introduction: Technical Change and Long Waves in Economic Development
5. The British Industrial Revolution: The Age of Cotton, Iron, and Water Power
6. The Second Kondratiev Wave: The Age of Iron Railways, Steam Power, and Mechanization
7. The Third Kondratiev Wave: The Age of Steel, Heavy Engineering, and Electrification
8. The Fourth Kondratiev Wave: The Great Depression and the Age of Oil, Automobiles, Motorization, and Mass Production
9. The Emergence of a New Techno-economic Paradigm: The Age of Information and Communication Technology
Conclusions: Recurrent Phenomena of the Long Waves of Capitalist Development