How To Use Jevons In A Sentence
-
Some elements of equational logic that we now take for granted required a considerable number of years for Jevons to resolve:
The Algebra of Logic Tradition
-
Socialist, rejected the Marxian in favour of Jevonsian economics, and devoted itself to the social education of the public by means of lectures, pamphlets and books, and to the spread of Collectivist ideas by the "permeation" of public bodies and political parties.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
-
He says the idea that resource conservation accelerates resource consumption - known as Jevons paradox - was proposed in the 1865 book "The Coal Question" by William Stanley Jevons, who noted that coal prices fell and coal consumption soared after improvements in steam engine efficiency.
Newswise: Latest News
-
The focus of the article is something called the Jevons paradox named after economist William Jevons, or the more common and more broadly defined "rebound effect.
Jim Barrett: Rebounds Gone Wild
-
By carrying out this analysis in the special setting of an algebra of predicates (or equivalently, in an algebra of classes) Jevons played an important role in the development of modern equational logic.
The Algebra of Logic Tradition
-
He says the idea that resource conservation accelerates resource consumption? known as Jevons paradox? was proposed in the 1865 book "The Coal Question" by William Stanley Jevons, who noted that coal prices fell and coal consumption soared after improvements in steam engine efficiency.
Science Blog - Science news straight from the source
-
When Mr. Jevons lays himself out to express himself, sir," he said to me as we retreated, "he pulls it off what you may call a bleedin 'masterpiece.
The Belfry
-
In energy economics, this fact is called Jevons' Paradox.
Ian Fletcher: The Manufacturing Rebound Is a Myth
-
But it was fortunately completely ignored in economic thought[4] until it was dredged up by Jevons and the mathematically inclined wing of the late-19th-century marginal-utility theorists.
-
Spearman is a fictitious character, the hero of a series of murder mysteries written by Marshall Jevons.