I met and had a brief conversation with Hirschman just after Exit and Voice had 
come out and I was finishing grad school.  I'd had a brilliant insight which 
would expand and improve his book.  After I explained my idea briefly he 
politely shrugged and went on his way.  I can't recall my insight but I do 
recall that it was brilliant.

Gene

On Jun 22, 2013, at 11:52 AM, Julio Huato <[email protected]> wrote:

> This illustrates the reason why, in my mind, strategizing and planning
> is so important.  Communism will be improvised or it will not happen.
> But to improvise it, to bump into it serendipitously and/or by sheer
> brawn, it needs to be thought out in advance in due precision and
> detail.  Only to find in retrospect that the precision was
> unnecessary, irrelevant, or "useless," that the details (wherein the
> devil lies) were all "wrong."
> 
> http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2013/06/24/130624crbo_books_gladwell?currentPage=all
> 
> Don't hate.  I cannot stand this fellow, Gladwell, either.  And I
> don't even care whether he gets things right.  I haven't read
> Hirschman's book, the subject of the piece.  Hirschman though was one
> of those fellows with the mental subtlety to make even the economists
> understand the need for a mushier branch of the discipline labelled
> "development" (not to be confused with "growth macro," although I
> don't know why not confuse them).  The book in question is the
> Principle of the Hiding Hand (out in print).  I read this Gladwell
> piece as I'd read a piece of fiction.  Still, if it stirs up your
> neurons, it is good.
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