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  1. Herbert Stanley Jevons, aka HS Jevons (1875-1955), was the son of economist and mathematician William Stanley Jevons. He was professor of economics and political science at University of South Wales. He was also the first Head of Department of Economics at University of Allahabad.

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    Jevons war ein Enkel des berühmten Historikers William Roscoe. Er studierte zunächst in London Chemie. Nach dem Bankrott seines Vaters brach Jevons sein Studium ab und ging nach Australien. Dort war er von 1853 bis 1858 Wardein (das heißt, er war für die Prüfung der Echtheit der Münzen zuständig) der australischen Münze in Sydney, ehe er nach Londo...

    Gemeinsam mit Léon Walras und Carl Menger entdeckte er eine Lösung des klassischen Wertparadoxons. Wie sich später herausstellte, hatte jedoch bereits Hermann Heinrich Gossendas Problem gelöst. Als erster beschrieb Jevons den Rebound-Effekt, im speziellen Fall nach ihm Jevons’ Paradoxongenannt. Darunter wird das Phänomen verstanden, dass technische...

    Pure Logic(1864)
    The Coal Question(1865)
    Substitution of similars the true principle of reasoning(1869)
    Theory of political economy(1871, 2. Aufl. 1879), worin er nationalökonomische Lehrsätze in mathematischer Form entwickelt
    Literatur von und über William Stanley Jevons im Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek
    John J. O’Connor, Edmund F. Robertson: William Stanley Jevons. In: MacTutor History of Mathematics archive(englisch).
    Lindsay Barrett and Matthew Connell: Jevons and the Logic Piano, The Rutherford Journal Volume 1
    Jeffrey J. Love: On the insignificance of Herschel's sunspot correlation. In: Geophysical Research Letters. August 2013, doi:10.1002/grl.50846(open access).
  2. William Stanley Jevons FRS (/ ˈ dʒ ɛ v ən z /; 1 September 1835 – 13 August 1882) was an English economist and logician. Irving Fisher described Jevons's book A General Mathematical Theory of Political Economy (1862) as the start of the mathematical method in economics. [3]

  3. 22. Jan. 2007 · William Stanley Jevons (1835–1882) was an economist and philosopher who foreshadowed several developments of the 20th century. He is one of the main contributors to the ‘marginal revolution’, which revolutionised economic theory and shifted classical to neoclassical economics.

  4. They had three children, one son Herbert Stanley Jevons following in his father's footsteps and becoming well known as an economist. Jevons remained in Manchester until he moved to University College, London in 1876. His time at Manchester was a highly productive one.

  5. 8. Juni 2018 · The English economist, logician, and statistician William Stanley Jevons (1835-1882) did pioneering work in marginalist economics, index numbers of prices, and economic fluctuations. The son of a merchant, W. S. Jevons was born in Liverpool on Sept. 1, 1835.

  6. The most eminent figure to hold a professorship of economics at UCL was William Stanley Jevons, also earlier a student of the college. Often seen as the main British contributor to the marginalist revolution in economic thought of the 1870s, he challenged Ricardian ideas, seeking for instance to replace theories of value based on labour input ...