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Examples
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Borrowed from the ideologies of Italian Economist Vilfredo Pareto and Archimedes, Ferriss delineates how you can have a killer body and fantastic health in the spirit and efficiency of his first book, 4HWW, so you can have a great life and actually LIVE it.
Michael Martin: America Needs The 4 Hour Body: A Look Inside The New Book by Timothy Ferriss Michael Martin 2010
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Borrowed from the ideologies of Italian Economist Vilfredo Pareto and Archimedes, Ferriss delineates how you can have a killer body and fantastic health in the spirit and efficiency of his first book, 4HWW, so you can have a great life and actually LIVE it.
Michael Martin: America Needs The 4 Hour Body: A Look Inside The New Book by Timothy Ferriss Michael Martin 2010
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Borrowed from the ideologies of Italian Economist Vilfredo Pareto and Archimedes, Ferriss delineates how you can have a killer body and fantastic health in the spirit and efficiency of his first book, 4HWW, so you can have a great life and actually LIVE it.
Michael Martin: America Needs The 4 Hour Body: A Look Inside The New Book by Timothy Ferriss Michael Martin 2010
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Borrowed from the ideologies of Italian Economist Vilfredo Pareto and Archimedes, Ferriss delineates how you can have a killer body and fantastic health in the spirit and efficiency of his first book, 4HWW, so you can have a great life and actually LIVE it.
Michael Martin: America Needs The 4 Hour Body: A Look Inside The New Book by Timothy Ferriss Michael Martin 2010
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Borrowed from the ideologies of Italian Economist Vilfredo Pareto and Archimedes, Ferriss delineates how you can have a killer body and fantastic health in the spirit and efficiency of his first book, 4HWW, so you can have a great life and actually LIVE it.
Michael Martin: America Needs The 4 Hour Body: A Look Inside The New Book by Timothy Ferriss Michael Martin 2010
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Note that this observation has also been made - in the last century alone - by Robert Michels, Gaetano Mosca, Vilfredo Pareto and James Burnham.
North, Wallis, and Weingast, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty 2009
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"Pareto optimality," a term named after the Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto (1848 – 1923), is defined as an allocation of economic resources that produces the greatest good.
A Government Failure, Not a Market Failure By John H. Makin 2009
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In textbooks on economics, the creators of neoclassical economics (Stanley Jevons, Leon Walras, Maria Edgeworth, and Vilfredo Pareto) are credited with transforming the study of economics into a rigorously mathematical scientific discipline.
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He called it his "Pareto principle" after economist Vilfredo Pareto, a 19th-century Italian economist who noted that 20% of the population owned 80% of the property in Italy.
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Vilfredo Pareto, the Italian economist in 1906, was the first to point out the existence of the Power Law Distribution to describe the distribution of Income and Tax receipt data.
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