Preface Acknowledgements Part I: Adam Smith 1. Adam Smith: Market-Failure Pioneer, and Champion of 'Natural Liberty' 2. John Rae and Adam Smith (1998) 3. Jeremy Bentham and Adam Smith on the Usury Laws: a 'Smithian' Reply to Bentham and a New Problem (1999) Part II: The Classical Canon: Ricardo, Bailey, Say, and Sraffa 4. The Canonical Classical Growth Model: Content, Adherence and Priority (1998) 5. Samuel Bailey and the Question of his 'Influence': a Sceptical View (2010) 6. Jean-Baptiste Say and the Classical Canon in Economics: Land-Based Growth Theory (2005) 7. Ricardo as a 'Classical' Economist; the 'New View' Re-examined: a Reply to Dr Peach (2007) 8.
The Old 'New View' Reaffirmed: a Truly Final Word? 9. Sraffa in Historiographical Perspective: a Provisional Statement (1998) 10. Reply to Stirati's Comment on my 'Sraffa and the Interpretation of Ricardo: the Marxian Dimension' (2011) Part III: Malthus 11. Malthus and Classical Economics: the Malthus-Ricardo Relationship (2001) 12. Malthus and Method: a Study in Irony (1999) 13. Malthus and the Corn-Profit Model (2000) 14. New Avenues for Research in Malthus Studies; On Hashimoto and Pullen's 'Two Unpublished Letters of Malthus' (2006) 15. An Invited Comment on 'Reappraisal of "Malthus the Economist", 1933-1997' by A.
M.C. Waterman (1998) Part IV: Marxian Political Economy 16. Engels-Marx versus Malthus on Distribution and the Population Issue (2003) 17. On the Marxian Entrepreneur: Karl Marx's Abandonment of the Doctrine of Exploitation under Industrial Capitalism (2011) 18. On Karl Marx's Doctrine of Exploitation: a Reply to Critics Part V: Biographical Perspectives 19. John P. Henderson's Life and Economics of David Ricardo (2001) 20.
Martin Bronfenbrenner as a Comrade-in-Arms in establishing the 'New Classical Economics' (1999) 21. Continuing a Conversation with Larry Moss (1945-2009) (2010) 22. Afterword: A Memoir Continued.