John Kenneth Galbraith
October 15, 2012
On this date in 1908, John Kenneth Galbraith
was born in Iona Station, Ontario, Canada. He earned his B.S. at the
University of Toronto in 1931 and his M.S. there in 1933. He received
his doctorate at the University of California in 1934. Galbraith taught
there and at Princeton before joining Harvard's faculty. He was Paul M.
Warburg Professor of Economics Emeritus at Harvard, where he retired in
1975. His first bestseller was The Affluent Society, 1958, a warning about U.S. inattention to social welfare, which was followed by The New Industrial State (1967) and Economics and the Public Purpose (1973). His other books include many on economics, as well as Annals of an Abiding Liberal (1979), and A Life in Our Times
(1981). During World War II, Galbraith was in charge of wartime price
control, and was given the Medal of Freedom in 1946. A Democrat, he
campaigned for Adlai Stevenson in 1952 and 1956, was ambassador to India
for two years under John Kennedy, and was an adviser and speechwriter
to JFK, Eugene McCarthy and George McGovern. Galbraith was an early
critic of the Vietnam War. He was married to Catherine Atwater and they
had three sons. The American Humanist Association named Galbraith
Humanist of the Year in 1985. D. 2006.
“I have managed most of my life to exclude religious speculation from my mode of thought. I've found that, on the whole, it adds very little to economics.”
— John Kenneth Galbraith, "What I've Learned," Esquire, January 2002
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
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