Newman’s commitment to free markets and individual enterprise, as outlined in his book Elements of Political Economy, gained him sufficient notoriety to attract the attention of Karl Marx, who singled out the book for criticism in his classic indictment of capitalism, Das Kapital, says Khan. “Like most free market economists,” she adds, Newman also “had a ‘rational heart,’ that was ‘full of sympathy for every form of suffering.’” Besides his pioneering contributions to economics as a teacher and scholar, Newman was a vocal supporter of financial aid policies at Bowdoin so disadvantaged students would have access to educational opportunities.
“The whole research project got started when I realized that the Bowdoin archives included our course catalogues from the early nineteenth century,” explains Khan, who says she was astonished to find that the College had added a position in economics so early in its history. “As a free market economist myself, it’s a great honor to realize that I’m part of a Bowdoin Economics tradition that extends back for two hundred years.”
Khan says she wrote the post because she wanted to share this discovery with current and former students. Victoria Yu ’19, who is starting this fall at Harvard Law School, emailed Khan to say: “It is so incredible to see the scans of the course catalogs going back so many years. It fills me with wonder to think about the change that the college has undergone in two hundred years, and to think about where a couple hundred more will lead it.”
Khan describes Newman as a passionate free market economist at a time when the US was starting to undergo massive economic expansion.
Bowdoin Scholar was America's First Appointed Economics Professor, Says Prof. Zorina Khan - Bowdoin News
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