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In the Cotswold Hills north of Bath, England, large manor houses were made from the local oolitic limestone. Cotswold Cottage at AIER in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, built from 1929 to 1931, was intended to be a copy of that Cotswold style, which is why our revered stone house has sometimes been called “Old Cotswold.”
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Table of Contents Part I Otto N. Larsen Lundberg’s Encounters with Sociology and Vice Versa 1 William R. Catton, Jr. An Assessment of Lundberg’s Substantive Inquiries 23 Franz Abler Comments on Lundberg’s Sociological […]
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In 1969, as the war in Vietnam was raging, AIER Founder Edward C. Harwood and his brothers wrote an open letter to President Richard Nixon.
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By Donald G. Ferguson, Bion H. Francis, E. C. Harwood, Benjamin D. Manton, and Their Assistants on the Institute Staff Part I Where Does Money Come From, and What Is Inflation? Has […]
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Behavioral Research Council Transactional Viewpoints, Vol. II, No. 1, 2003, Winter Quarterly Letters on the Transactional View, the Sciences and the Arts
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Behavioral Research Council Transactional Viewpoints, Vol. I, No. 1, 2002, Winter Quarterly Letters on the Transactional View, the Sciences and the Arts
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Behavioral Research Council Transactional Viewpoints, Vol. II, No. 3, 2003, Summer Quarterly Letters on the Transactional View, the Sciences and the Arts
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Behavioral Research Council Transactional Viewpoints, Vol. I, No. 3, 2002, Summer Quarterly Letters on the Transactional View, the Sciences and the Arts
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Behavioral Research Council Transactional Viewpoints, Vol. II, No. 2, 2003, Spring Quarterly Letters on the Transactional View, the Sciences and the Arts
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Behavioral Research Council Transactional Viewpoints, Vol. I, No. 2, 2002, Spring Quarterly Letters on the Transactional View, the Sciences and the Arts
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Behavioral Research Council Transactional Viewpoints, Vol. I, No. 4, 2002, Fall Quarterly Letters on the Transactional View, the Sciences and the Arts