About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

2 Const. Pol. Econ. 1 (1991)

handle is hein.journals/constpe2 and id is 1 raw text is: CONSTITUTIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY, VOL. 2, NO. 1, 1991
JACK WISEMAN: A PERSONAL APPRECIATION
James M. Buchanan
There is so much still to do: may there be enough time.
Academics are lucky people. What better life could there be?
Jack Wiseman Cost, Choice and Political Economy
There was not enough time. Jack Wiseman died on 20 January 1991,
less than a month after his seventy-first birthday, and only two months
after he returned to Yorkshire from one of his regular visits to the
Center for Study of Public Choice, in Fairfax, Virginia. He described
this last visit (September-November 1990) as the most stimulating of
the five he had made to Fairfax, after earlier visits both to Charlottesville
and Blacksburg. He left us full of vigor and determined to get on with
the treatise he had already fully organized in his thinking. Cancer was
diagnosed immediately on his return home, and in both conversations
and correspondence over those last few weeks, Jack stuck fast to the
convictions expressed in the last two sentences of the above citation.
And, in an electronic message relayed to my colleague, David Levy,just
four days before his death, Jack ended with, Don't be too distressed for
me. After all, what has happened is an (unwelcome) vindication of the
Wiseman Unknowability Thesis.
The Center for Study of Public Choice has lost an Adjunct Research
Associate, and one of its most enthusiastic supporters. Constitutional
Political Economy has lost a contributing member of its Board of Edi-
tors. Professional colleagues and friends on all continents who mourn
his death must be counted in the hundreds.
My own is, however, a special deprivation, that only I can partially
understand, but which, somehow, I must try to express in this note,
the writing of which may, in itself, help me to locate Jack Wiseman in
that small (and dwindling) set of persons who have been more than
colleagues, more than friends. Jack himself told part of the story in
his introductory autobiographical essay in Cost, Choice and Political
Economy (1989), the closing words of which I used in the preceding
epigraph.
I first met Jack in 1960, early during one of my four visits to London
and LSE in that turbulent decade. Both of us were, in a sense, outsiders

I

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Short-term subscription options include 24 hours, 48 hours, or 1 week to HeinOnline.

Contact us for annual subscription options:

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most