Keynes was one of those rare persons who can both think and act at the highest level. His life falls into cycles or phases, in which the emphasis shi… - Robert Skidelsky

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Keynes was one of those rare persons who can both think and act at the highest level. His life falls into cycles or phases, in which the emphasis shifts from one to the other. These shifts were related to what was happening in the world. At some times, particularly during the two world wars, there was a greater demand for Keynes's practical genius, and a greater satisfaction to be had from exercising it. But the cycles can also be seen in terms of action and reaction. Periods of great intellectual effort demand their release in practical activity, while practical activity prompts, sooner or later, a yearning for the cloister. Before 1914, Keynes's desire for the cloister was uppermost, partly because he was at this period most under the immediate influence of Moore's philosophy, partly because the nature of his sexual relations fitted private life better than public life ― a point of considerable importance even today, but more so then, when homosexual acts were illegal, and the danger of blackmail much greater.

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About Robert Skidelsky

Robert Jacob Alexander, Baron Skidelsky, FBA (born 25 April 1939), is a British economic historian.

Also Known As

Alternative Names: Robert Jacob Alexander Skidelsky Professor Robert Jacob Alexander Skidelsky, Baron Skidelsky Baron Skidelsky
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Like Odysseus, Keynes was a successful, not a tragic, hero. He heard the beautiful singing of the Sirens, but took precautions against being shipwrecked, keeping to the course for which his talents and the state of the world predestined him. Artfully, he strove for the best of all worlds, in his life and his work, and miraculously, came close to achieving it.

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