Abstract
The introduction of time-series graphs into British economics in the 19 century depended on the « timing » of history. This involved reconceptualizing history into events which were both comparable and measurable and standardized by time unit. Yet classical economists in Britain in the early 19th century viewed history as a set of heterogenous and complex events and statistical tables as giving unrelated facts. Both these attitudes had to be broken down before time-series graphs could be brought into use for revealing regularities in economic events by the century's end.
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Maas, H., & S.morgan, M. (2002). Timing history: The introduction of graphical analysis in 19th century british economics. Revue d’Histoire Des Sciences Humaines. https://doi.org/10.3917/rhsh.007.0097
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