Robert J. Gordon (1940) American economist
Source: The American Business Cycle, 1986, p. 1-2
Source: The American Business Cycle, 1986, p. 2
Robert J. Gordon (1940) American economist
Source: The American Business Cycle, 1986, p. 1-2
Robert J. Gordon (1940) American economist
Robert J. Gordon, Are Procyclical Productivity Fluctuations a Figment of Measurement Error? (1992).
Arthur F. Burns (1904–1987) American economist and diplomat
Arthur F. Burns and George W. Mitchell (1946). Measuring business cycles. New York: National Bureau of Economic Research. p. 3; Cited in: Robert J. Gordon, ed. The American Business Cycle: Continuity and Change, 1986. p. 2
Richard A. Posner (1939) United States federal judge
The Crisis of Capitalist Democracy (2010) Ch. 10 The Crisis of Macroeconomics.
Robert J. Gordon (1940) American economist
Source: The American Business Cycle, 1986, p. 2
William F. Sharpe (1934) American economist
Statements such as these are made with alarming frequency by investment professionals. In some cases, subtle and sophisticated reasoning may be involved. More often (alas), the conclusions can only be justified by assuming that the laws of arithmetic have been suspended for the convenience of those who choose to pursue careers as active managers.
William F Sharpe, "The arithmetic of active management." Financial Analysts Journal 47.1 (1991): 7-9.
Meher Baba (1894–1969) Indian mystic
Statement before 1955, as quoted in God Speaks : The Theme of Creation and Its Purpose (1973), p. 266.
General sources
Context: Whether there have been 26 Avatars since Adam, or 124,000 Prophets, as is sometimes claimed, or whether Jesus Christ was the last and only Messiah, or Muhammad the last Prophet, is all immaterial and insignificant when eternity and reality are under consideration.
It matters very little to dispute whether there have been ten or twenty-six or a million Avatars. The truth is that the Avatar is always one and the same, and that the five Sadgurus bring about the advent of the Avatar on earth. This has been going on cycle after cycle, and millions of such cycles must have passed by, and will continue to pass by, without affecting eternity in the least.
Robert C. Merton (1944) American economist
Robert C. Merton, " Robert C. Merton - Biographical http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economic-sciences/laureates/1997/merton-bio.html," at Nobelprize.org, 1997