There may be room for a few pure theorists… In my life I’ve met a few brilliant geniuses, very few, who could sit in an office and think great thoughts and contribute to the world. It’s a very small number, by the way. Then I’ve met lots of people who generalize, which doesn’t move me because I don’t find it helpful. I find it distracting, confusing, misguided, or misplaced.
For most of us mortals, I think the deep engagement in real problems is crucial. I wouldn’t want to train doctors without the medical students walking the wards with their mentors. I don’t like training economists without them grappling with real problems in real places and learning the complexity of the interacting physical, technological, political, economic, natural systems.
Question for readers: Jeffrey Sachs is best known for two things—shock therapy for former communist countries trying to modernize, and the Millennium Village projects. Are these examples vindication or refutation of his quote here?
Jeffrey D. Sachs on the Future of Innovation, in conversation with Tyler Cowen.
Question for readers: Jeffrey Sachs is best known for two things—shock therapy for former communist countries trying to modernize, and the Millennium Village projects. Are these examples vindication or refutation of his quote here?