This
is not an age for statuary. As a rule, we honor not the doer
but the deed. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which
has done about as much to define our times as any other single
institution, made this point long ago with a sly joke.
When
chief architect W. Welles Bosworth in 1913 designed a main building
for its new campus in Cambridge, with a million square feet
and a great dome patterned on the Pantheon in Paris, he specified
that a fifty-foot-tall statue of Minerva dominate the building's
Great Court.
Later,
when he added a new building to the complex with a grand entrance
hall, Bosworth placed four marble pedestals in its corners,
with instructions that atop three of them should be placed the
busts of great men to be designated by the Institute's trustees,
while on the fourth should rest a likeness of the great architect,
Sir Christopher Wren.
All
four pedestals still stand empty. The statue of Minerva was
never built. Nor, as far as I know, is the stone likeness of
any human being -- scientist/engineer, benefactor, administrator
-- to be found anywhere else on the campus. Even paintings are
hard to find. For many years, most lecture halls and laboratories
had numbers instead of names. (Names of the saints of science,
safely dead, are carved upon the main building's frieze).
It
might be time to rethink those premises.
The
great physical chemist Arthur Noyes left MIT in 1919 for Pasadena
to help found the modern Caltech. Cyberneticist Norbert Wiener
is long dead. So is molecular biologist Salvatore Luria. But
economist Paul Samuelson is still around. He has been around
so long, in fact, more than 60 years, that people tend to take
his presence for granted. It is all very well to endow those
chairs, create those awards in his name, but perhaps there should
be more emphasis on the man's human qualities.
To
understand Samuelson's place in the 20th century, it is necessary
to know something about Alfred Marshall, the man whose role
in economics he assumed, more than fifty years ago.
Marshall
was born in 1842 in a London suburb. He studied mathematics
at Cambridge University, graduating with a B.A. in 1865, and
gradually came to prefer political economy to all other pursuits.
He taught at Bristol, then briefly at Oxford, and in 1885 became
the first-ever professor of political economy at Cambridge.
In 1890 he published Principles of Economics – the
first of eight editions. Almost overnight, it became, in Phyllis
Deane's description, “the bible of the English neoclassical
school.” At that point, Marshall had already been teaching for
20 years; he had trained half the other professors in England.
For
the next fifty years, he was the world's greatest all-around
economist and the personification of its authority – until,
with Foundations of Economic Analysis, Samuelson took
his place.
In
1890, it was easy enough for outsiders to miss the epoch-making
quality of Marshall 's textbook. From its very first sentence,
the book emphasized its continuity with the past and sought
to ground itself in a commonsensical understanding of Victorian
life: “Political Economy or Economics is a study of mankind
in the ordinary business of life; it examines that part of individual
and social action which is most closely connected with the attainment
and with the use of the material requisites of well-being.”
Its
mathematical logic was banished to the appendices. The little
geometrical drawings of intersecting supply and demand curves
that it introduced are confined to the footnotes. But so thorough
(for the most part) was its logic, and so polished its presentation,
that “the Cambridge school” eclipsed the Austrian and Lausanne
variants and became the economics of the English-speaking world
for the nest half-century.
Foundations
appeared in 1947. The title appeared to be a deliberate
echo of mathematicians' tomes, including those of Frege, Brouwer
and Hilbert, itself perhaps a sly dig at Keynes, who a dozen
years before had borrowed the title of his “General Theory”
from Einstein. These kinds of inside jokes will, of course,
take decades to get straight. In a 35th anniversary edition
of Foundations , Samuelson wrote, “What interested
its young author most … was the success it could achieve in
formulating a general theory of economic theories.”
From
the very beginning, however, Foundations took dead
aim, not at Keynes, but at Principles.
For
a time, Samuelson explained, he had hoped to render his discussion
non-technical, at least of basic topics. Then it became clear
that such an effort, though possible, would have required a
book many times longer than the equation-packed 439-page Foundations
that eventuated – and very much harder to read.
So
why bother translating intrinsically clear mathematical logic
into literary propositions? “I have come to feel,” he wrote,
“that Marshall 's dictum that ‘It seems doubtful any one spends
his time well in reading lengthy translations of economic doctrines
into mathematics, that have not been made by himself' should
be exactly reversed.
“The
laborious literary working over of essentially simple mathematical
concepts such as is characteristic of much of modern economic
theory is not only unrewarding from the standpoint of advancing
the science, but involves as well mental gymnastics of a particularly
depraved type.”
Hence
the frontispiece, “Mathematics is a language,” a sentiment attributed
to J. Willard Gibbs the great American physicist of the mid-19th
century.
“Most
economic treatises are concerned either with the description
of some part of the world of reality or with the elaboration
of particular elements abstracted from the reality,” began Samuelson.
“Implicit in such analyses there are certain recognizable formal
uniformities, which are indeed characteristic of all scientific
method.
“It
is proposed here to investigate these common features in the
hope of demonstrating how it is possible to deduce general principles
which can serve to unify large sectors of present-day economic
theory.”
Whereupon
he did just that – restating the theories of consumption and
production in more general terms than ever before, using mathematics
to reason through to many conclusions otherwise invisible even
to a sophisticated intuition.
Much
of Foundations had originally appeared as papers,
some as early as 1937. The manuscript itself had been accepted
by Harvard as a dissertation in 1941. It languished unpublished
throughout World War II, its essentials circulating freely among
the relatively small community of elite theorists, the whole
finally emerging between hard covers only in 1947.
Theorist-turned-historian-of-thought
Jurg Niehans described Foundations this way:
“Displaying a mastery of calculus, differential and difference
equations that was stupendous at the time (but soon became standard
under its influence), the book restated, clarified and developed
the intuitive reasoning of John Hicks' Value and Capital
in the lucid language of mathematics… Among the many fundamental
ideas the book put forth, none was perhaps more pregnant than
the insight that Lagrange multipliers have an economic interpretation
as prices, later to be called shadow prices.”
(So
vexed by the bold mathematics was the chairman of the Harvard
department, Harold Burbank, who had been required to publish
his thesis by the rules of a prize Samuelson had won, that he
insisted the laboriously hand-set plates with their extensive
mathematical notation be destroyed after a press run of only
1,500 copies – thus insuring that no new edition would appear
until Harvard understood a revenge-served-cold 35 th anniversary
edition. Long before 1947, however, Samuelson had responded
to the series of Harvard snubs by moving two miles down the
street to MIT).
And
since no longer was it possible to speak to all those who needed
economics with a single book, the very next year Samuelson published
a second, very different work. The first edition of Economics:
An Introductory Analysis appeared in 1948 – and quickly
became the single best-selling college text of all time, the
model on which virtually all its successful competitors have
been patterned ever since.
For
the college text, Samuelson stripped away the concern with the
scientific fundamentals that animated Foundations .
He emphasized instead the quick-and-dirty consensus that had
developed in the previous ten years around the bare bones of
Keynesian macroeconomics – what within a few years he would
dub “the neoclassical synthesis.” Thus did he deliver on the
subtitle he had chosen for his thesis barely a decade before:
“The Operational Significance of Economic Theory.”
Again,
Niehans on Economics , the text: “No other book has
contributed so much to the emergence of a universal body of
economic theory that is considered standard wherever teaching
and learning are free.” Virtually everywhere in the industrial
democracies but the University of Chicago, Marshall 's Principles
and its near-substitutes were swept aside.
To
Samuelson, the comparison with Marshall today must seem no better
than a “left-handed compliment.” That's because the compromises
that Marshall made in the name of Victorian common sense were
precisely those to whose clearing-up Samuelson devoted his career.
In 1967, he put is this way: “[T]he ambiguities of Alfred Marshall
paralyzed the best brains in the Anglo-Saxon branch of our profession
for three decades.” To outsiders, even a large-scale
reduction in ambiguities may not seem as important as the influence
over others that Foundations achieved, unless, of
course, they conclude that the history of economics more or
less ended with the appearance of the book. To a thorough-going
scientist like Samuelson, however, pedagogical immortality must
seem like second place.
Yet
Marshall and Samuelson have three distinctive accomplishments
in common. Each demonstrated the use of a language that immediately
was adopted by the rest of the profession. With each, the mountain
moved to Mohammed. While Marshall lived, Cambridge, England,
was economics' most vital center, and for another decade after
he died in 1924. Thereafter leadership shifted to the New World,
and, thanks to Samuelson, to Cambridge, Mass. Finally, Marshall,
like Samuelson, was eclectic and ran an open system. Other economists
were encouraged to join in.
To
put their respective achievements in perspective, consider that
Samuelson's split-level codification is only the fifth basic
text that economics has embraced since it was organized along
scientific lines, the charter of each lasting around fifty years.
First there was Adam Smith, whose An Inquiry into
the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations was published
in 1776. Forty years later, in 1817, David Ricardo's The
Principles of Political Economy and Taxation displaced
it. A mere thirty years on, Principles of Political Economy
by John Stuart Mill appeared in 1848. In 1890 came Marshall,
and in Paul Samuelson in 1947. In due course, someone else will
doubtless take Samuelson's place.
That
is not to say, of course, that there weren't many other great
and a perhaps a few even greater individual economists in those
years, whose luck-of-the-draw discoveries may cause them to
be remembered even longer. Consider, for example, John von Neumann.
Or Kenneth Arrow. Or John Nash. Or Ronald Coase. But the intellectual
history of a discipline is very different from its social history.
The
two men differ in another important respect. Marshall was something
of a failure as a human being. He never finished an intended
second volume of his text. He spent his time giving testimony
to commissions instead of scouting out and working through the
contradictions in his work. “Frail and dyspeptic,” said a friend.
“A man for all seasons – and none,” wrote his biographer.
Samuelson,
on the other hand, is still going strong, tack-sharp and playing
winning tennis twice a week. His collected papers fill five
volumes and will require a sixth – reflecting a rich array of
contributions across the length and breadth of economics. And
“He had a hell of a lot of fun doing it,” says his friend Carl
Kaysen. Only a little adjustment (to reflect his dedication
to 20 th century scientific ideals) is required to apply to
him the economium Keynes bestowed upon the “master-economist”
Marshall : “He must be a mathematician, historian, statesman,
philosopher – in some degree. He must understand symbols and
speak in word. He must study the present in light of the past
for purposes of the future. No part of man's nature or his institutions
must lie entirely outside his regard.”
So
as a vigorous Samuelson approaches 90 (he was born in 1915),
it just might make sense for the gift committee to think of
commemorating his vast and benign influence on scientific economics
with something a little more personal and durable than another
professorship. Those four empty pedestals in the great hall
at 77 Massachusetts Avenue are not going to be filled any time
soon – what a dustup if they tried! In fact, it is far too soon
to know who most deeply has made the modern MIT. But
there can't be much doubt that scientific economics in the second
half of the 20th century belonged to Samuelson and Cambridge,
Massachusetts, much as most of the first half belonged to Marshall
and Cambridge, England. For that reason alone it would be nice
to have a bust.