INTRODUCTORY
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shows that the results reached on the basis
of a discriminating mental abstraction (that
is the imagined separation of things that
may be inseparable) hold with approximate
accuracy. A brain specialist may study the
brain alone, broadly speaking, though no brain
could survive when severed from the body with
which it was united. Similarly we may study
the economic activities of a group of people,
ignoring their religious and political instincts
as such, that is, so far as they are not expressed
economically, though these instincts are an
integral part of human nature ; or, again, we
may study the economic activities of one
person, mentally separating him from the
community of which he forms a part.
We may go even further in our defence
of analytical economics, for there is this very
important point to bear in mind, that many
of the mental abstractions that we make
as economists do not assume, even for the
sake of argument, the isolated existence
of things that cannot exist in isolation.
Marginal abstractions merely confine us to
noticing how changes in relation to a thing
affect that thing. In other words, thinking
now of the marginal method in economics
merely, our abstractions consist merely in
focusing attention on a thing and difieren-