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Frank Plumpton Ramsey (/ˈræmzi/; 22 February 1903 – 19 January 1930) was a British philosopher, mathematician, and economist who made major contributions to all three fields before his death at the age of 26. He was a close friend of Ludwig Wittgenstein and, as an undergraduate, translated Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus into English. He was also influential in persuading Wittgenstein to return to philosophy and Cambridge. Like Wittgenstein, he was a member of the Cambridge Apostles, the secret intellectual society, from 1921.
Frank Ramsey | |
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Ramsey, c. 1921 | |
Born | Frank Plumpton Ramsey 22 February 1903 |
Died | 19 January 1930 | (aged 26)
Education | Trinity College, Cambridge (BA, 1923) |
Spouse | Lettice Ramsey (m. 1925) |
Children | 2 |
Era | 20th-century philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
School | Analytic philosophy |
Institutions | King's College, Cambridge |
Main interests | |
Notable ideas |
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Life
Ramsey was born on 22 February 1903 in Cambridge where his father Arthur Stanley Ramsey (1867–1954), also a mathematician, was President of Magdalene College. His mother was Mary Agnes Stanley (1875–1927). He was the eldest of two brothers and two sisters, and his brother Michael Ramsey, the only one of the four siblings who was to remain Christian, later became Archbishop of Canterbury. He entered Winchester College in 1915 and later returned to Cambridge to study mathematics at Trinity College. There he became a student of John Maynard Keynes and an active member in the Apostles. In 1923, he received his bachelor's degree in mathematics, passing his examinations with the result of first class with distinction, and was named Senior Wrangler (top of his class). Easy-going, simple and modest, Ramsey had many interests besides his mathematical and scientific studies. Even as a teenager, Ramsey exhibited both a profound ability and, as attested by his brother, an extremely diverse range of interests:
He was interested in almost everything. He was immensely widely read in English literature; he was enjoying classics though he was on the verge of plunging into being a mathematical specialist; he was very interested in politics, and well-informed; he had got a political concern and a sort of left-wing caring-for-the-underdog kind of outlook about politics.
— Michael Ramsey, Quoted in Mellor
In 1923, Ramsey was befriended by Geoffrey and Margaret Pyke, then on the point of founding the Malting House School in Cambridge; the Pykes took Ramsey into their family, taking him on holiday and asking him to be the godfather of their young son. Margaret found herself to be the object of his affection, Ramsey recording in his diary:
One afternoon I went out alone with her on Lake Orta and became filled with desire and we came back and lay on two beds side by side she reading, I pretending to, but with an awful conflict in my mind. After about an hour I said (she was wearing her horn spectacles and looking superlatively beautiful in the Burne Jones style) 'Margaret will you fuck with me?'
Margaret wanted time to consider his proposition and thus began an uncomfortable dance between them, which contributed to Ramsey's depressive moods in early 1924; as a result, he travelled to Vienna for psychoanalysis. Like many of his contemporaries, including his Viennese flatmate and fellow Apostle Lionel Penrose (also in analysis with Siegfried Bernfeld), Ramsey was intellectually interested in psychoanalysis. Ramsey's analyst was Theodor Reik, a disciple of Freud. As one of the justifications for undertaking the therapy, he asserted in a letter to his mother that unconscious impulses might affect even a mathematician's work. While in Vienna, he made a trip to Puchberg in order to visit Wittgenstein, was befriended by the Wittgenstein family and visited A.S. Neill's experimental school four hours from Vienna at Sonntagsberg. In the summer of 1924, he continued his analysis by joining Reik at Dobbiaco (in South Tyrol), where a fellow analysand was Lewis Namier. Ramsey returned to England in October 1924; with John Maynard Keynes's support, he became a fellow of King's College, Cambridge. He joined a Psychoanalysis Group in Cambridge with fellow members Arthur Tansley, Lionel Penrose, Harold Jeffreys, and James Strachey, the qualification for membership of which was a completed psychoanalysis.
Ramsey married Lettice Baker in August 1925, the wedding taking place in a Register Office since Ramsey was, as his wife described him, a 'militant atheist'. The marriage produced two daughters. After Ramsey's death, Lettice Ramsey opened a photography studio in Cambridge with photographer Helen Muspratt. Despite his atheism, Ramsey was "quite tolerant" towards his brother when the latter decided to become a priest in the Church of England.
In 1926 he became a university lecturer in mathematics and later a Director of Studies in Mathematics at King's College. The Vienna Circle manifesto (1929) lists three of his publications in a bibliography of closely related authors.
Ramsey and Wittgenstein
When I. A. Richards and C. K. Ogden, both Fellows of Magdalene, first met Ramsey, he expressed his interest in learning German. According to Richards, he mastered the language "in almost hardly over a week", although other sources show he had taken one year of German in school. Ramsey was then able, at the age of 19, to make the first draft of the translation of the German text of Ludwig Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. Ramsey was impressed by Wittgenstein's work and after graduating as Senior Wrangler in the Mathematical Tripos of 1923 he made a journey to Austria to visit Wittgenstein, at that time teaching in a primary school in the small community of Puchberg am Schneeberg. For two weeks Ramsey discussed the difficulties he was facing in understanding the Tractatus. Wittgenstein made some corrections to the English translation in Ramsey's copy and some annotations and changes to the German text that subsequently appeared in the second edition in 1933.
Ramsey and John Maynard Keynes cooperated to try to bring Wittgenstein back to Cambridge (he had been a student there before World War I). Once Wittgenstein had returned to Cambridge, Ramsey became his nominal supervisor. Wittgenstein submitted the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus as his doctoral thesis. G.E. Moore and Bertrand Russell acted as examiners. Later, the three of them arranged financial aid for Wittgenstein to help him continue his research work.
In 1929 Ramsey and Wittgenstein regularly discussed issues in mathematics and philosophy with Piero Sraffa, an Italian economist who had been brought to Cambridge by Keynes after Sraffa had aroused Benito Mussolini's ire by publishing an article critical of the Fascist regime in the Manchester Guardian. The contributions of Ramsey to these conversations were acknowledged by both Sraffa and Wittgenstein in their later work.
In the introduction to Philosophical Investigations Wittgenstein credits Ramsey's criticism of the Tractatus in the "interminable conversations" they had as having helped him realise "grave mistakes" within the work.
Early death
Suffering chronic liver problems, Ramsey developed jaundice after an abdominal operation and died on 19 January 1930 at Guy's Hospital in London at the age of 26. There is a suspicion that the cause of his death might be an undiagnosed leptospirosis with which Ramsey, an avid swimmer, could have become infected while swimming in the Cam.
He is buried in the Parish of the Ascension Burial Ground in Cambridge; his parents are buried in the same plot.
Ramsey's notes and manuscripts were acquired by Nicholas Rescher for the Archives of Scientific Philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh. This collection contains only a few letters but a great many drafts of papers and book chapters, some still unpublished. Other papers, including his diary and letters and memoirs by his widow Lettice Ramsey and his father, are held in the Modern Archives, King's College, Cambridge.
Work
Mathematical logic
One of the theorems proved by Ramsey in his 1928 paper On a Problem of Formal Logic now bears his name (Ramsey's theorem). While this theorem is the work Ramsey is probably best remembered for, he proved it only in passing, as a minor lemma along the way to his true goal in the paper, solving a special case of the decision problem for first-order logic, namely the decidability of what is now called the Bernays–Schönfinkel–Ramsey class of first-order logic, as well as a characterisation of the spectrum of sentences in this fragment of logic. Alonzo Church would go on to show that the general case of the decision problem for first-order logic is unsolvable and that first-order logic is undecidable (see Church's theorem). A great amount of later work in mathematics was fruitfully developed out of the ostensibly minor lemma used by Ramsey in his decidability proof: this lemma turned out to be an important early result in combinatorics, supporting the idea that within some sufficiently large systems, however disordered, there must be some order. So fruitful, in fact, was Ramsey's theorem that today there is an entire branch of mathematics, known as Ramsey theory, which is dedicated to studying similar results.
In 1926, Ramsey proposed a simplification of the Theory of Types developed by Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead in their Principia Mathematica. The resulting theory is known today as Theory of Simple Type (TST) or Simple Type Theory. Ramsey observed that a hierarchy of types was sufficient to deal with mathematical paradoxes, so removed Russell's and Whitehead's ramified hierarchy, which was meant to elude semantic paradoxes. Ramsey's version of the theory is the one considered by Kurt Gödel in the original proof of his first incompleteness theorem. Ramsey's Theory of Simple Types was further simplified by Willard van Orman Quine in his New Foundations for set theory, in which any explicit reference to types is eliminated from the language of the theory.
Philosophy
His main philosophical works included Universals (1925), Facts and Propositions (1927) (which proposed a redundancy theory of truth), Universals of Law and of Fact (1928), Knowledge (1929), Theories (1929), On Truth (1929), Causal Qualities (1929), and General Propositions and Causality (1929). Ramsey was perhaps the first to propose a reliabilist theory of knowledge. He also produced what philosopher Alan Hájek has described as an "enormously influential version of the subjective interpretation of probability". His thought in this area was outlined in the paper Truth and Probability (discussed below) which was written in 1926 but first published posthumously in 1931.
Economics
Keynes and Pigou encouraged Ramsey to work on economics as "From a very early age, about sixteen I think, his precocious mind was intensely interested in economic problems" (Keynes, 1933). Ramsey responded to Keynes's urging by writing three papers in economic theory all of which were of fundamental importance, though it was many years before they received their proper recognition by the community of economists.
Ramsey's three papers, described below in detail, were on subjective probability and utility (1926), optimal taxation (1927) and optimal growth in a one-sector economy (1928). The economist Paul Samuelson described them in 1970 as "three great legacies – legacies that were for the most part mere by-products of his major interest in the foundations of mathematics and knowledge."
Ramsey's economic views were socialist.
Truth and Probability
In A Treatise on Probability (1921), Keynes argued against the subjective approach in epistemic probabilities. For Keynes, the subjectivity of probabilities does not matter as much, as for him there is an objective relationship between knowledge and probabilities, as knowledge is disembodied and not personal.
Ramsey disagreed with this approach. In his article "Truth and Probability" (1926), he argued that there is a difference between the notions of probability in physics and in logic. For Ramsey, probability is not related to a disembodied body of knowledge but is related to the knowledge that each individual possesses alone. Thus personal beliefs that are formulated by this individual knowledge govern probabilities, leading to the notions of subjective probability and Bayesian probability. Consequently, subjective probabilities can be inferred by observing actions that reflect individuals' personal beliefs. Ramsey argued that the degree of probability that an individual attaches to a particular outcome can be measured by finding what odds the individual would accept when betting on that outcome.
Ramsey suggested a way of deriving a consistent theory of choice under uncertainty that could isolate beliefs from preferences while still maintaining subjective probabilities, although Ramsey later noted that "taking the whole field of chance events no generalizations about them are possible (consider e.g. infectious diseases, dactyls in hexameters, deaths from horse kicks, births of great men)."
Despite the fact that Ramsey's work on probabilities was of great importance, no one paid any attention to it until the publication of Theory of Games and Economic Behavior by John von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern in 1944 (1947 2nd ed.)[citation needed], although after Ramsey's death, an approach to probability similar to his was developed independently by the Italian mathematician Bruno de Finetti.
A Contribution to the Theory of Taxation
This paper, first published in 1927 has been described by Joseph E. Stiglitz as "a landmark in the economics of public finance" In the same, Ramsey contributed to economic theory the elegant concept of Ramsey pricing. This is applicable in situations where a (regulated) monopolist wants to maximise consumer surplus whilst at the same time ensuring that its costs are adequately covered. This is achieved by setting the price such that the markup over marginal cost is inversely proportional to the price elasticity of demand for that good. Ramsey poses the question that is to be solved at the beginning of the article: "A given revenue is to be raised by proportionate taxes on some or all uses of income, the taxes on different uses being possibly at different rates; how much should these rates be adjusted in order that the decrement of utility may be a minimum?" The problem was suggested to him by the economist Arthur Pigou and the paper was Ramsey's answer to the problem.[citation needed]
A Mathematical Theory of Saving
Described by Partha Dasgupta, in a Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry devoted to it, as "one of the dozen or so most influential papers of the 20th century" in the field of academic economics, "A Mathematical Theory of Saving" was originally published in The Economic Journal in 1928. It employed, as Paul Samuelson described it, "a strategically beautiful application of the calculus of variations" to determine the optimal amount an economy should invest rather than consume so as to maximise future utility, or as Ramsey put it, "How much of its income should a nation save?"
Keynes described the article as "one of the most remarkable contributions to mathematical economics ever made, both in respect of the intrinsic importance and difficulty of its subject, the power and elegance of the technical methods employed, and the clear purity of illumination with which the writer's mind is felt by the reader to play about its subject. The article is terribly difficult reading for an economist, but it is not difficult to appreciate how scientific and aesthetic qualities are combined in it together." The Ramsey model is today acknowledged as the starting point for optimal accumulation theory although its importance was not recognised until many years after its first publication.
The main contributions of the model were firstly the initial question Ramsey posed on how much savings should be and secondly the method of analysis, the intertemporal maximisation (optimisation) of collective or individual utility by applying techniques of dynamic optimisation. Tjalling C. Koopmans and David Cass modified the Ramsey model incorporating the dynamic features of population growth at a steady rate and of Harrod-neutral technical progress again at a steady rate, giving birth to a model named the Ramsey–Cass–Koopmans model where the objective now is to maximise household's utility function.[citation needed]
Legacy
Frank P. Ramsey Medal
The Decision Analysis Society annually awards the Frank P. Ramsey Medal to recognise substantial contributions to decision theory and its application to important classes of real decision problems.
Frank Ramsey Professorships
Howard Raiffa was made the first Frank P. Ramsey Professor (of Managerial Economics) at Harvard University. Richard Zeckhauser was made the Frank P. Ramsey Professor of Political Economy at Harvard University in 1971. Raiffa's chair was joint between the Harvard Business and Kennedy Schools. Zeckhauser's chair is in the Kennedy School. Partha Dasgupta was made the Frank Ramsey Professor of Economics in 1994 and Frank Ramsey Professor Emeritus of Economics in 2010 at the University of Cambridge.
Ramsey Effect
In 1999, the philosopher Donald Davidson gave the name "Ramsey Effect" to anyone's realisation that their splendid new philosophical discovery already existed within Frank Ramsey's body of work.
See also
- Clique game
- Expected utility hypothesis
- Money pump
- Ramsey cardinal
- Structural Ramsey theory
- Quantum Bayesianism
- Theorem on friends and strangers
- Type theory
- History of type theory
- Frederick Rowbottom
- Bayesian epistemology
Notes
- Cheryl Misak, Cambridge Pragmatism: From Peirce and James to Ramsey and Wittgenstein, Oxford University Press, 2016, p. 3.
- Ramsey, Frank P. "Frank P. Ramsey's Papers". Special Collections Department, University of Pittsburgh. Retrieved 19 September 2013.
- Quoted from Ramsey's Diary, 13 January 1924 by Forrester, 2004.
- "Biography". Helen Muspratt - Photographer. Archived from the original on 18 July 2016. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
- "He was certainly sorry that I went on being religious; he was sorry that I decided to become a priest in the Church of England; sorry indeed, but quite tolerant." Quoted in Mellor, "Ramsey", p. 255.
- Frank P. Ramsey (1925). "Universals". Mind. 34 (136): 401–417. doi:10.1093/mind/xxxiv.136.401.
- Frank P. Ramsey (1926). "Foundations of Mathematics" (PDF). Proc. London Math. Soc. 25: 338–384. doi:10.1112/plms/s2-25.1.338.
- Frank P. Ramsey (1927). "Facts and Propositions" (PDF). Proc. Aristot. Soc. Suppl. 7: 153–170. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 October 2020. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
- Quoted in Mellor, "Ramsey", p. 245.
- See Gabriele Taylor (in Galavotti 2006, pp. 1–18) and Duarte (2009a).
- Wittgenstein, Ludwig (1963). Philosophical Investigations. Basil Blackwell Ltd. p. viii.
- Misak, Cheryl (9 February 2020). "Frank Ramsey: A Genius by All Tests for Genius". History News Network. Retrieved 7 October 2024.
- A Guide to Churchill College, Cambridge. Text by dr. Mark Goldie, pages 62 and 63 (2009).
- Ramsey, Frank Plumpton (1991). "EDITORS' INTRODUCTION" (PDF). On Truth: Original Manuscript Materials (1927-1929) from the Ramsey Collection at the University of Pittsburgh. Nicholas Rescher, Ulrich Majer (Eds.). Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers. ISBN 0-7923-0857-3. OCLC 21909907.
- "Frank Plumpton Ramsey Papers | Digital Pitt". digital.library.pitt.edu. Retrieved 30 April 2021.
- Ramsey, F.P. (1926). "The Foundations of Mathematics". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society, pp. 2–25, 338–384.
- Coquand, Thierry (2022), "Type Theory", in Zalta, Edward N.; Nodelman, Uri (eds.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2022 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 28 November 2024.
- (1931). "Über formal unentscheidbare Sätze der Principia Mathematica und verwandter Systeme I". Monatshefte für Mathematik und Physik, 38: 173–198.
- Quine, W.V. (1937), "New Foundations for Mathematical Logic". American Mathematical Monthly, 44: 70–80.
- Goldman, Alvin; Beddor, Bob (2016), "Reliabilist Epistemology", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2016 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 17 October 2019,
Perhaps the first formulation of a reliability account of knowing appeared in a brief discussion by F.P. Ramsey (1931), who said that a belief is knowledge if it is true, certain and obtained by a reliable process. This attracted no attention at the time and apparently did not influence reliability theories of the 1960s, 70s, or 80s.
- Hájek, Alan (2019), "Interpretations of Probability", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2019 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 19 October 2019.
- F.P. Ramsey (1926) "Truth and Probability", in Ramsey, 1931, The Foundations of Mathematics and other Logical Essays, Ch. VII, pp.156-198, edited by R.B. Braithwaite, London: Kegan, Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company 1999 electronic edition.
- Samuelson, Paul A. (1970). "What Makes for a Beautiful Problem in Science?". Journal of Political Economy. 78 (6): 1372–1377. doi:10.1086/259716. JSTOR 1830631. S2CID 154344155.
- Marouzi, S. (2022). "Frank Plumpton Ramsey and the Politics of Motherhood". Journal of the History of Economic Thought. 44 (4): 489–508. doi:10.1017/S105383722100033X.
- Bradley, Richard (2001). "Ramsey and the Measurement of Belief". In Corfield, David; Williamson, Jon (eds.). Foundations of Bayesianism. Applied Logic Series. Vol. 24. Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 263–290. doi:10.1007/978-94-017-1586-7_11. ISBN 978-90-481-5920-8.
- F.P. Ramsey (1928) "Further Considerations", in Ramsey, 1931, The Foundations of Mathematics and other Logical Essays, Ch. VIII, p.210,211, edited by R.B. Braithwaite, London: Kegan, Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company 1999 electronic edition.
- de Finetti, Buno (1937). "La prévision: ses lois logiques, ses sources subjectives". Annales de l'Institut Henri Poincaré (in French). 7 (1): 1–68.
- Stiglitz, Joseph E. (1 March 2015). "In Praise of Frank Ramsey's Contribution to the Theory of Taxation" (PDF). The Economic Journal. 125 (583): 235–268. doi:10.1111/ecoj.12187. ISSN 0013-0133. S2CID 13147636.
- Ramsey, F. P. (1927). "A Contribution to the Theory of Taxation" (PDF). The Economic Journal. 37 (145): 47–61. doi:10.2307/2222721. ISSN 0013-0133. JSTOR 2222721.
- Dasgupta, Partha (2019), "Ramsey and Intergenerational Welfare Economics", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2019 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 17 October 2019.
- Ramsey, F. P. (1928). "A Mathematical Theory of Saving" (PDF). The Economic Journal. 38 (152): 543–559. doi:10.2307/2224098. ISSN 0013-0133. JSTOR 2224098.
- Keynes, J. M. (March 1930). "F. P. Ramsey".The Economic Journal. 40 (157): 153–154. JSTOR 2223657. Reprinted in: Keynes J.M. (2010) "F. P. Ramsey", Essays in Biography. Palgrave Macmillan, London, pp. 335–336.
- "Home - Decision Analysis Society". connect.informs.org. Retrieved 28 February 2025.
- Frank P. Ramsey Medal Archived 13 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine.
- "CURRICULUM VITAE" (PDF). www.econ.cam.ac.uk. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 July 2014.
- Misak, Cheryl (2020). Frank Ramsey: A Sheer Excess of Powers. Oxford University Press. p. xxv. ISBN 978-0-19875-535-7. OCLC 1102642049.
References
- Arrow, K (1980). "Review: Foundations: Essays in Philosophy, Logic, Mathematics and Economics" (PDF). Journal of Political Economy. 88 (3): 636–638. doi:10.1086/260894.
- Bernstein, B. A. (1932). "Review: The Foundations of Mathematics, and other Essays by Frank Plumpton Ramsey, edited by R. B. Braithwaite, preface by G. E. Moore" (PDF). Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 38 (9): 611–612. doi:10.1090/s0002-9904-1932-05470-2.
- Duarte, Pedro G (2009a). "Frank P. Ramsey: A Cambridge Economist". History of Political Economy. 41 (3): 445–470. doi:10.1215/00182702-2009-035. S2CID 144949987.
- Duarte, Pedro G. (2009b). "Frank Ramsey's Notes on Saving and Taxation" (PDF). History of Political Economy. 41 (3): 471–489. doi:10.1215/00182702-2009-048. Archived from the original on 4 February 2023. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
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: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - Forrester, John (2004). "Freud in Cambridge" (PDF). Critical Quarterly. 46 (2): 1–26. doi:10.1111/j.0011-1562.2004.t01-1-00560.x. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 May 2011. Retrieved 26 July 2010.
- Galavotti, M. C. (Ed.) (2006), Cambridge and Vienna: Frank P. Ramsey and the Vienna Circle, Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Springer.
- Grattan-Guinness, Ivor (2000), The Search for Mathematical Roots 1870–1940, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.
- Keynes, John Maynard (1933), "F. P. Ramsey", in Essays in Biography, New York, NY.
- Mellor, D.H. (1995). "Cambridge Philosophers I: F. P. Ramsey". Philosophy. 70 (272): 243–262. doi:10.1017/s0031819100065396. S2CID 143786971.
- Newbery, D. "Ramsey model". The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics. 4: 46–48.
- Newman, P (1987). "Ramsey, Frank Plumpton". The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics. 4: 41–46.
- Ramsey, F.P. (1927). "Facts and Propositions". Aristotelian Society Supplementary. 7: 153–170. doi:10.1093/aristoteliansupp/7.1.153.
- Ramsey, F.P. (1928). "A Mathematical Theory of Saving" (PDF). Economic Journal. 38 (152): 543–559. doi:10.2307/2224098. JSTOR 2224098. Archived from the original on 22 January 2016. Retrieved 5 January 2024.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - Ramsey, F.P. (1927). "A Contribution to the Theory of Taxation" (PDF). Economic Journal. 37 (145): 47–61. doi:10.2307/2222721. JSTOR 2222721.
- Ramsey, F.P. (1929). "On a Problem in Formal Logic" (PDF). Proc. London Math. Soc. 30: 264–286. doi:10.1112/plms/s2-30.1.264.
- Ramsey, F.P. (1931), The Foundations of Mathematics, and other Essays, (ed.) R. B. Braithwaite
- Ramsey, F.P. (1978) Foundations – Essays in Philosophy, Logic, Mathematics and Economics, (ed.) D.H. Mellor, Humanities Press, LCCN 77-26864
- Rescher, Nicholas and Ulrich Majer (eds.) (1991). F. P. Ramsey: On Truth , Dordrecht, Kluwer
- Sahlin, N.-E. (1990), The Philosophy of F. P. Ramsey, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
- Sahlin, N.-E. (1996), "He is no good for my work": On the philosophical relations between Ramsey and Wittgenstein, in Knowledge and Inquiry: Essays on Jaakko Hintikkas Epistemology and Philosophy of Science, ed by M. Sintonen, Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of Sciences and the Humanities, Amsterdam, 61–84
- Sahlin, N.-E. (2005), Ramsey's Ontology, a special issue of Metaphysica, No. 3
- Samuelson, P (1970). "What Makes for a Beautiful Problem in Science?". Journal of Political Economy. 78 (6): 1372–1377. doi:10.1086/259716. S2CID 154344155.
Further reading
- Gottlieb, Anthony. "The Man Who Thought Too Fast". The New Yorker. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
- Misak, Cheryl (2020). Frank Ramsey: A Sheer Excess of Powers. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19875-535-7. (Review by Simon Blackburn [author-shared Eprint])
- Paul, Margaret (2012). Frank Ramsey (1903–1930): A Sister's Memoir. Smith-Gordon. ISBN 978-1-85463-248-7. (Reviews: 1: by Ray Monk; 2: by David Papineau [Archived])
- Sabbagh, Karl (2013). Shooting Star: The Brief and Brilliant Life of Frank Ramsey. Amazon Digital Services, Inc. ASIN B00BBJCUUW.
External links
- Frank Ramsey, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- Frank Plumpton Ramsey Papers
- Better than the Stars/Frank Ramsey: a biography a 1978 BBC radio portrait of Ramsey and a 1995 article derived from it, both by David Hugh Mellor.
- Maths and philosophy puzzles BBC Radio 3 programme discussing the legacy of Ramsey.
- A photo of Ramsey's grave at Findagrave
This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Frank Ramsey mathematician news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Frank Plumpton Ramsey ˈ r ae m z i 22 February 1903 19 January 1930 was a British philosopher mathematician and economist who made major contributions to all three fields before his death at the age of 26 He was a close friend of Ludwig Wittgenstein and as an undergraduate translated Wittgenstein s Tractatus Logico Philosophicus into English He was also influential in persuading Wittgenstein to return to philosophy and Cambridge Like Wittgenstein he was a member of the Cambridge Apostles the secret intellectual society from 1921 Frank RamseyRamsey c 1921BornFrank Plumpton Ramsey 1903 02 22 22 February 1903 Cambridge Cambridgeshire EnglandDied19 January 1930 1930 01 19 aged 26 Southwark London EnglandEducationTrinity College Cambridge BA 1923 SpouseLettice Ramsey m 1925 wbr Children2Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolAnalytic philosophyInstitutionsKing s College CambridgeMain interestsCombinatoricsPhilosophy of mathematicsLogicMetaphysicsEpistemologyNotable ideasTheory of simple typesRedundancy theory of truthRamsey sentencesRamsey Lewis methodRamsey theoryRamsey problemRamsey Dvoretzky Milman phenomenonRamsey testRamsey s theoremRamsey Cass Koopmans modelKeynes Ramsey ruleBernays Schonfinkel Ramsey classLifeRamsey was born on 22 February 1903 in Cambridge where his father Arthur Stanley Ramsey 1867 1954 also a mathematician was President of Magdalene College His mother was Mary Agnes Stanley 1875 1927 He was the eldest of two brothers and two sisters and his brother Michael Ramsey the only one of the four siblings who was to remain Christian later became Archbishop of Canterbury He entered Winchester College in 1915 and later returned to Cambridge to study mathematics at Trinity College There he became a student of John Maynard Keynes and an active member in the Apostles In 1923 he received his bachelor s degree in mathematics passing his examinations with the result of first class with distinction and was named Senior Wrangler top of his class Easy going simple and modest Ramsey had many interests besides his mathematical and scientific studies Even as a teenager Ramsey exhibited both a profound ability and as attested by his brother an extremely diverse range of interests He was interested in almost everything He was immensely widely read in English literature he was enjoying classics though he was on the verge of plunging into being a mathematical specialist he was very interested in politics and well informed he had got a political concern and a sort of left wing caring for the underdog kind of outlook about politics Michael Ramsey Quoted in Mellor In 1923 Ramsey was befriended by Geoffrey and Margaret Pyke then on the point of founding the Malting House School in Cambridge the Pykes took Ramsey into their family taking him on holiday and asking him to be the godfather of their young son Margaret found herself to be the object of his affection Ramsey recording in his diary One afternoon I went out alone with her on Lake Orta and became filled with desire and we came back and lay on two beds side by side she reading I pretending to but with an awful conflict in my mind After about an hour I said she was wearing her horn spectacles and looking superlatively beautiful in the Burne Jones style Margaret will you fuck with me Margaret wanted time to consider his proposition and thus began an uncomfortable dance between them which contributed to Ramsey s depressive moods in early 1924 as a result he travelled to Vienna for psychoanalysis Like many of his contemporaries including his Viennese flatmate and fellow Apostle Lionel Penrose also in analysis with Siegfried Bernfeld Ramsey was intellectually interested in psychoanalysis Ramsey s analyst was Theodor Reik a disciple of Freud As one of the justifications for undertaking the therapy he asserted in a letter to his mother that unconscious impulses might affect even a mathematician s work While in Vienna he made a trip to Puchberg in order to visit Wittgenstein was befriended by the Wittgenstein family and visited A S Neill s experimental school four hours from Vienna at Sonntagsberg In the summer of 1924 he continued his analysis by joining Reik at Dobbiaco in South Tyrol where a fellow analysand was Lewis Namier Ramsey returned to England in October 1924 with John Maynard Keynes s support he became a fellow of King s College Cambridge He joined a Psychoanalysis Group in Cambridge with fellow members Arthur Tansley Lionel Penrose Harold Jeffreys and James Strachey the qualification for membership of which was a completed psychoanalysis Ramsey married Lettice Baker in August 1925 the wedding taking place in a Register Office since Ramsey was as his wife described him a militant atheist The marriage produced two daughters After Ramsey s death Lettice Ramsey opened a photography studio in Cambridge with photographer Helen Muspratt Despite his atheism Ramsey was quite tolerant towards his brother when the latter decided to become a priest in the Church of England In 1926 he became a university lecturer in mathematics and later a Director of Studies in Mathematics at King s College The Vienna Circle manifesto 1929 lists three of his publications in a bibliography of closely related authors Ramsey and WittgensteinWhen I A Richards and C K Ogden both Fellows of Magdalene first met Ramsey he expressed his interest in learning German According to Richards he mastered the language in almost hardly over a week although other sources show he had taken one year of German in school Ramsey was then able at the age of 19 to make the first draft of the translation of the German text of Ludwig Wittgenstein s Tractatus Logico Philosophicus Ramsey was impressed by Wittgenstein s work and after graduating as Senior Wrangler in the Mathematical Tripos of 1923 he made a journey to Austria to visit Wittgenstein at that time teaching in a primary school in the small community of Puchberg am Schneeberg For two weeks Ramsey discussed the difficulties he was facing in understanding the Tractatus Wittgenstein made some corrections to the English translation in Ramsey s copy and some annotations and changes to the German text that subsequently appeared in the second edition in 1933 Ramsey and John Maynard Keynes cooperated to try to bring Wittgenstein back to Cambridge he had been a student there before World War I Once Wittgenstein had returned to Cambridge Ramsey became his nominal supervisor Wittgenstein submitted the Tractatus Logico Philosophicus as his doctoral thesis G E Moore and Bertrand Russell acted as examiners Later the three of them arranged financial aid for Wittgenstein to help him continue his research work In 1929 Ramsey and Wittgenstein regularly discussed issues in mathematics and philosophy with Piero Sraffa an Italian economist who had been brought to Cambridge by Keynes after Sraffa had aroused Benito Mussolini s ire by publishing an article critical of the Fascist regime in the Manchester Guardian The contributions of Ramsey to these conversations were acknowledged by both Sraffa and Wittgenstein in their later work In the introduction to Philosophical Investigations Wittgenstein credits Ramsey s criticism of the Tractatus in the interminable conversations they had as having helped him realise grave mistakes within the work Early deathSuffering chronic liver problems Ramsey developed jaundice after an abdominal operation and died on 19 January 1930 at Guy s Hospital in London at the age of 26 There is a suspicion that the cause of his death might be an undiagnosed leptospirosis with which Ramsey an avid swimmer could have become infected while swimming in the Cam He is buried in the Parish of the Ascension Burial Ground in Cambridge his parents are buried in the same plot Ramsey s notes and manuscripts were acquired by Nicholas Rescher for the Archives of Scientific Philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh This collection contains only a few letters but a great many drafts of papers and book chapters some still unpublished Other papers including his diary and letters and memoirs by his widow Lettice Ramsey and his father are held in the Modern Archives King s College Cambridge WorkMathematical logic One of the theorems proved by Ramsey in his 1928 paper On a Problem of Formal Logic now bears his name Ramsey s theorem While this theorem is the work Ramsey is probably best remembered for he proved it only in passing as a minor lemma along the way to his true goal in the paper solving a special case of the decision problem for first order logic namely the decidability of what is now called the Bernays Schonfinkel Ramsey class of first order logic as well as a characterisation of the spectrum of sentences in this fragment of logic Alonzo Church would go on to show that the general case of the decision problem for first order logic is unsolvable and that first order logic is undecidable see Church s theorem A great amount of later work in mathematics was fruitfully developed out of the ostensibly minor lemma used by Ramsey in his decidability proof this lemma turned out to be an important early result in combinatorics supporting the idea that within some sufficiently large systems however disordered there must be some order So fruitful in fact was Ramsey s theorem that today there is an entire branch of mathematics known as Ramsey theory which is dedicated to studying similar results In 1926 Ramsey proposed a simplification of the Theory of Types developed by Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead in their Principia Mathematica The resulting theory is known today as Theory of Simple Type TST or Simple Type Theory Ramsey observed that a hierarchy of types was sufficient to deal with mathematical paradoxes so removed Russell s and Whitehead s ramified hierarchy which was meant to elude semantic paradoxes Ramsey s version of the theory is the one considered by Kurt Godel in the original proof of his first incompleteness theorem Ramsey s Theory of Simple Types was further simplified by Willard van Orman Quine in his New Foundations for set theory in which any explicit reference to types is eliminated from the language of the theory Philosophy His main philosophical works included Universals 1925 Facts and Propositions 1927 which proposed a redundancy theory of truth Universals of Law and of Fact 1928 Knowledge 1929 Theories 1929 On Truth 1929 Causal Qualities 1929 and General Propositions and Causality 1929 Ramsey was perhaps the first to propose a reliabilist theory of knowledge He also produced what philosopher Alan Hajek has described as an enormously influential version of the subjective interpretation of probability His thought in this area was outlined in the paper Truth and Probability discussed below which was written in 1926 but first published posthumously in 1931 Economics Keynes and Pigou encouraged Ramsey to work on economics as From a very early age about sixteen I think his precocious mind was intensely interested in economic problems Keynes 1933 Ramsey responded to Keynes s urging by writing three papers in economic theory all of which were of fundamental importance though it was many years before they received their proper recognition by the community of economists Ramsey s three papers described below in detail were on subjective probability and utility 1926 optimal taxation 1927 and optimal growth in a one sector economy 1928 The economist Paul Samuelson described them in 1970 as three great legacies legacies that were for the most part mere by products of his major interest in the foundations of mathematics and knowledge Ramsey s economic views were socialist Truth and Probability In A Treatise on Probability 1921 Keynes argued against the subjective approach in epistemic probabilities For Keynes the subjectivity of probabilities does not matter as much as for him there is an objective relationship between knowledge and probabilities as knowledge is disembodied and not personal Ramsey disagreed with this approach In his article Truth and Probability 1926 he argued that there is a difference between the notions of probability in physics and in logic For Ramsey probability is not related to a disembodied body of knowledge but is related to the knowledge that each individual possesses alone Thus personal beliefs that are formulated by this individual knowledge govern probabilities leading to the notions of subjective probability and Bayesian probability Consequently subjective probabilities can be inferred by observing actions that reflect individuals personal beliefs Ramsey argued that the degree of probability that an individual attaches to a particular outcome can be measured by finding what odds the individual would accept when betting on that outcome Ramsey suggested a way of deriving a consistent theory of choice under uncertainty that could isolate beliefs from preferences while still maintaining subjective probabilities although Ramsey later noted that taking the whole field of chance events no generalizations about them are possible consider e g infectious diseases dactyls in hexameters deaths from horse kicks births of great men Despite the fact that Ramsey s work on probabilities was of great importance no one paid any attention to it until the publication of Theory of Games and Economic Behavior by John von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern in 1944 1947 2nd ed citation needed although after Ramsey s death an approach to probability similar to his was developed independently by the Italian mathematician Bruno de Finetti A Contribution to the Theory of Taxation This paper first published in 1927 has been described by Joseph E Stiglitz as a landmark in the economics of public finance In the same Ramsey contributed to economic theory the elegant concept of Ramsey pricing This is applicable in situations where a regulated monopolist wants to maximise consumer surplus whilst at the same time ensuring that its costs are adequately covered This is achieved by setting the price such that the markup over marginal cost is inversely proportional to the price elasticity of demand for that good Ramsey poses the question that is to be solved at the beginning of the article A given revenue is to be raised by proportionate taxes on some or all uses of income the taxes on different uses being possibly at different rates how much should these rates be adjusted in order that the decrement of utility may be a minimum The problem was suggested to him by the economist Arthur Pigou and the paper was Ramsey s answer to the problem citation needed A Mathematical Theory of Saving Described by Partha Dasgupta in a Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry devoted to it as one of the dozen or so most influential papers of the 20th century in the field of academic economics A Mathematical Theory of Saving was originally published in The Economic Journal in 1928 It employed as Paul Samuelson described it a strategically beautiful application of the calculus of variations to determine the optimal amount an economy should invest rather than consume so as to maximise future utility or as Ramsey put it How much of its income should a nation save Keynes described the article as one of the most remarkable contributions to mathematical economics ever made both in respect of the intrinsic importance and difficulty of its subject the power and elegance of the technical methods employed and the clear purity of illumination with which the writer s mind is felt by the reader to play about its subject The article is terribly difficult reading for an economist but it is not difficult to appreciate how scientific and aesthetic qualities are combined in it together The Ramsey model is today acknowledged as the starting point for optimal accumulation theory although its importance was not recognised until many years after its first publication The main contributions of the model were firstly the initial question Ramsey posed on how much savings should be and secondly the method of analysis the intertemporal maximisation optimisation of collective or individual utility by applying techniques of dynamic optimisation Tjalling C Koopmans and David Cass modified the Ramsey model incorporating the dynamic features of population growth at a steady rate and of Harrod neutral technical progress again at a steady rate giving birth to a model named the Ramsey Cass Koopmans model where the objective now is to maximise household s utility function citation needed LegacyFrank P Ramsey Medal The Decision Analysis Society annually awards the Frank P Ramsey Medal to recognise substantial contributions to decision theory and its application to important classes of real decision problems Frank Ramsey Professorships Howard Raiffa was made the first Frank P Ramsey Professor of Managerial Economics at Harvard University Richard Zeckhauser was made the Frank P Ramsey Professor of Political Economy at Harvard University in 1971 Raiffa s chair was joint between the Harvard Business and Kennedy Schools Zeckhauser s chair is in the Kennedy School Partha Dasgupta was made the Frank Ramsey Professor of Economics in 1994 and Frank Ramsey Professor Emeritus of Economics in 2010 at the University of Cambridge Ramsey Effect In 1999 the philosopher Donald Davidson gave the name Ramsey Effect to anyone s realisation that their splendid new philosophical discovery already existed within Frank Ramsey s body of work See alsoBiography portalClique game Expected utility hypothesis Money pump Ramsey cardinal Structural Ramsey theory Quantum Bayesianism Theorem on friends and strangers Type theory History of type theory Frederick Rowbottom Bayesian epistemologyNotesCheryl Misak Cambridge Pragmatism From Peirce and James to Ramsey and Wittgenstein Oxford University Press 2016 p 3 Ramsey Frank P Frank P Ramsey s Papers Special Collections Department University of Pittsburgh Retrieved 19 September 2013 Quoted from Ramsey s Diary 13 January 1924 by Forrester 2004 Biography Helen Muspratt Photographer Archived from the original on 18 July 2016 Retrieved 29 January 2018 He was certainly sorry that I went on being religious he was sorry that I decided to become a priest in the Church of England sorry indeed but quite tolerant Quoted in Mellor Ramsey p 255 Frank P Ramsey 1925 Universals Mind 34 136 401 417 doi 10 1093 mind xxxiv 136 401 Frank P Ramsey 1926 Foundations of Mathematics PDF Proc London Math Soc 25 338 384 doi 10 1112 plms s2 25 1 338 Frank P Ramsey 1927 Facts and Propositions PDF Proc Aristot Soc Suppl 7 153 170 Archived from the original PDF on 31 October 2020 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Quoted in Mellor Ramsey p 245 See Gabriele Taylor in Galavotti 2006 pp 1 18 and Duarte 2009a Wittgenstein Ludwig 1963 Philosophical Investigations Basil Blackwell Ltd p viii Misak Cheryl 9 February 2020 Frank Ramsey A Genius by All Tests for Genius History News Network Retrieved 7 October 2024 A Guide to Churchill College Cambridge Text by dr Mark Goldie pages 62 and 63 2009 Ramsey Frank Plumpton 1991 EDITORS INTRODUCTION PDF On Truth Original Manuscript Materials 1927 1929 from the Ramsey Collection at the University of Pittsburgh Nicholas Rescher Ulrich Majer Eds Dordrecht Kluwer Academic Publishers ISBN 0 7923 0857 3 OCLC 21909907 Frank Plumpton Ramsey Papers Digital Pitt digital library pitt edu Retrieved 30 April 2021 Ramsey F P 1926 The Foundations of Mathematics Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society pp 2 25 338 384 Coquand Thierry 2022 Type Theory in Zalta Edward N Nodelman Uri eds The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2022 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 28 November 2024 1931 Uber formal unentscheidbare Satze der Principia Mathematica und verwandter Systeme I Monatshefte fur Mathematik und Physik 38 173 198 Quine W V 1937 New Foundations for Mathematical Logic American Mathematical Monthly 44 70 80 Goldman Alvin Beddor Bob 2016 Reliabilist Epistemology in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2016 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 17 October 2019 Perhaps the first formulation of a reliability account of knowing appeared in a brief discussion by F P Ramsey 1931 who said that a belief is knowledge if it is true certain and obtained by a reliable process This attracted no attention at the time and apparently did not influence reliability theories of the 1960s 70s or 80s Hajek Alan 2019 Interpretations of Probability in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2019 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 19 October 2019 F P Ramsey 1926 Truth and Probability in Ramsey 1931 The Foundations of Mathematics and other Logical Essays Ch VII pp 156 198 edited by R B Braithwaite London Kegan Paul Trench Trubner amp Co New York Harcourt Brace and Company 1999 electronic edition Samuelson Paul A 1970 What Makes for a Beautiful Problem in Science Journal of Political Economy 78 6 1372 1377 doi 10 1086 259716 JSTOR 1830631 S2CID 154344155 Marouzi S 2022 Frank Plumpton Ramsey and the Politics of Motherhood Journal of the History of Economic Thought 44 4 489 508 doi 10 1017 S105383722100033X Bradley Richard 2001 Ramsey and the Measurement of Belief In Corfield David Williamson Jon eds Foundations of Bayesianism Applied Logic Series Vol 24 Dordrecht Springer pp 263 290 doi 10 1007 978 94 017 1586 7 11 ISBN 978 90 481 5920 8 F P Ramsey 1928 Further Considerations in Ramsey 1931 The Foundations of Mathematics and other Logical Essays Ch VIII p 210 211 edited by R B Braithwaite London Kegan Paul Trench Trubner amp Co New York Harcourt Brace and Company 1999 electronic edition de Finetti Buno 1937 La prevision ses lois logiques ses sources subjectives Annales de l Institut Henri Poincare in French 7 1 1 68 Stiglitz Joseph E 1 March 2015 In Praise of Frank Ramsey s Contribution to the Theory of Taxation PDF The Economic Journal 125 583 235 268 doi 10 1111 ecoj 12187 ISSN 0013 0133 S2CID 13147636 Ramsey F P 1927 A Contribution to the Theory of Taxation PDF The Economic Journal 37 145 47 61 doi 10 2307 2222721 ISSN 0013 0133 JSTOR 2222721 Dasgupta Partha 2019 Ramsey and Intergenerational Welfare Economics in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2019 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 17 October 2019 Ramsey F P 1928 A Mathematical Theory of Saving PDF The Economic Journal 38 152 543 559 doi 10 2307 2224098 ISSN 0013 0133 JSTOR 2224098 Keynes J M March 1930 F P Ramsey The Economic Journal 40 157 153 154 JSTOR 2223657 Reprinted in Keynes J M 2010 F P Ramsey Essays in Biography Palgrave Macmillan London pp 335 336 Home Decision Analysis Society connect informs org Retrieved 28 February 2025 Frank P Ramsey Medal Archived 13 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine CURRICULUM VITAE PDF www econ cam ac uk Archived from the original PDF on 28 July 2014 Misak Cheryl 2020 Frank Ramsey A Sheer Excess of Powers Oxford University Press p xxv ISBN 978 0 19875 535 7 OCLC 1102642049 ReferencesArrow K 1980 Review Foundations Essays in Philosophy Logic Mathematics and Economics PDF Journal of Political Economy 88 3 636 638 doi 10 1086 260894 Bernstein B A 1932 Review The Foundations of Mathematics and other Essays by Frank Plumpton Ramsey edited by R B Braithwaite preface by G E Moore PDF Bull Amer Math Soc 38 9 611 612 doi 10 1090 s0002 9904 1932 05470 2 Duarte Pedro G 2009a Frank P Ramsey A Cambridge Economist History of Political Economy 41 3 445 470 doi 10 1215 00182702 2009 035 S2CID 144949987 Duarte Pedro G 2009b Frank Ramsey s Notes on Saving and Taxation PDF History of Political Economy 41 3 471 489 doi 10 1215 00182702 2009 048 Archived from the original on 4 February 2023 Retrieved 28 December 2023 a href wiki Template Cite journal title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Forrester John 2004 Freud in Cambridge PDF Critical Quarterly 46 2 1 26 doi 10 1111 j 0011 1562 2004 t01 1 00560 x Archived from the original PDF on 22 May 2011 Retrieved 26 July 2010 Galavotti M C Ed 2006 Cambridge and Vienna Frank P Ramsey and the Vienna Circle Dordrecht The Netherlands Springer Grattan Guinness Ivor 2000 The Search for Mathematical Roots 1870 1940 Princeton University Press Princeton NJ Keynes John Maynard 1933 F P Ramsey in Essays in Biography New York NY Mellor D H 1995 Cambridge Philosophers I F P Ramsey Philosophy 70 272 243 262 doi 10 1017 s0031819100065396 S2CID 143786971 Newbery D Ramsey model The New Palgrave A Dictionary of Economics 4 46 48 Newman P 1987 Ramsey Frank Plumpton The New Palgrave A Dictionary of Economics 4 41 46 Ramsey F P 1927 Facts and Propositions Aristotelian Society Supplementary 7 153 170 doi 10 1093 aristoteliansupp 7 1 153 Ramsey F P 1928 A Mathematical Theory of Saving PDF Economic Journal 38 152 543 559 doi 10 2307 2224098 JSTOR 2224098 Archived from the original on 22 January 2016 Retrieved 5 January 2024 a href wiki Template Cite journal title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Ramsey F P 1927 A Contribution to the Theory of Taxation PDF Economic Journal 37 145 47 61 doi 10 2307 2222721 JSTOR 2222721 Ramsey F P 1929 On a Problem in Formal Logic PDF Proc London Math Soc 30 264 286 doi 10 1112 plms s2 30 1 264 Ramsey F P 1931 The Foundations of Mathematics and other Essays ed R B Braithwaite Ramsey F P 1978 Foundations Essays in Philosophy Logic Mathematics and Economics ed D H Mellor Humanities Press LCCN 77 26864 Rescher Nicholas and Ulrich Majer eds 1991 F P Ramsey On Truth Dordrecht Kluwer Sahlin N E 1990 The Philosophy of F P Ramsey Cambridge University Press Cambridge Sahlin N E 1996 He is no good for my work On the philosophical relations between Ramsey and Wittgenstein in Knowledge and Inquiry Essays on Jaakko Hintikkas Epistemology and Philosophy of Science ed by M Sintonen Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of Sciences and the Humanities Amsterdam 61 84 Sahlin N E 2005 Ramsey s Ontology a special issue of Metaphysica No 3 Samuelson P 1970 What Makes for a Beautiful Problem in Science Journal of Political Economy 78 6 1372 1377 doi 10 1086 259716 S2CID 154344155 Further readingGottlieb Anthony The Man Who Thought Too Fast The New Yorker Retrieved 27 April 2020 Misak Cheryl 2020 Frank Ramsey A Sheer Excess of Powers Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19875 535 7 Review by Simon Blackburn author shared Eprint Paul Margaret 2012 Frank Ramsey 1903 1930 A Sister s Memoir Smith Gordon ISBN 978 1 85463 248 7 Reviews 1 by Ray Monk 2 by David Papineau Archived Sabbagh Karl 2013 Shooting Star The Brief and Brilliant Life of Frank Ramsey Amazon Digital Services Inc ASIN B00BBJCUUW External linksWikiquote has quotations related to Frank P Ramsey Frank Ramsey Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Frank Plumpton Ramsey Papers Better than the Stars Frank Ramsey a biography a 1978 BBC radio portrait of Ramsey and a 1995 article derived from it both by David Hugh Mellor Maths and philosophy puzzles BBC Radio 3 programme discussing the legacy of Ramsey A photo of Ramsey s grave at Findagrave