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Year of publication
Subject
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Behavioral Revolution 2 Economic Growth 2 Economic growth 2 Evolutionary economics 2 Evolutionsökonomik 2 Human Longevity 2 Human capital 2 Humankapital 2 Investition 2 Investment 2 Mortality 2 Natural Selection 2 Somatic Investment 2 Sterblichkeit 2 Technischer Fortschritt 2 Technological Progress 2 Technological change 2 Theorie 2 Theory 2 Wirtschaftswachstum 2 behavioral revolution 1 economic growth 1 human longevity 1 natural selection 1 somatic investment 1 technological progress 1
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Online availability
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Free 2 Undetermined 1
Type of publication
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Book / Working Paper 2 Article 1
Type of publication (narrower categories)
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Working Paper 2 Arbeitspapier 1 Article in journal 1 Aufsatz in Zeitschrift 1 Graue Literatur 1 Non-commercial literature 1
Language
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English 3
Author
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Grall, Lothar 3 Meckl, Jürgen 1
Published in...
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Joint discussion paper series in economics : publ. by the Universities of Aachen, Gießen, Göttingen, Kassel, Marburg, Siegen 1 MAGKS Joint Discussion Paper Series in Economics 1 Review of economics 1
Source
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ECONIS (ZBW) 2 EconStor 1
Showing 1 - 3 of 3
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Natural selection, technological progress, and the origin of human longevity
Grall, Lothar; Meckl, Jürgen - In: Review of economics 73 (2022) 3, pp. 183-210
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013553756
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Cover Image
Natural selection, technological progress, and the origin of human longevity
Grall, Lothar - 2016
This paper suggests that feedback effects between technological progress and human longevity lie at the heart of their common emergence in human history. It connects two major research questions. First, the long life span after menopause is a unique but puzzling feature of humans among primates....
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011616165
Saved in:
Cover Image
Natural selection, technological progress, and the origin of human longevity
Grall, Lothar - 2016
This paper suggests that feedback effects between technological progress and human longevity lie at the heart of their common emergence in human history. It connects two major research questions. First, the long life span after menopause is a unique but puzzling feature of humans among primates....
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011574985
Saved in:
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