Illustration Credits

Figure 1-1, page 34, drawing by Mason Wiest.

Figure 3-1, page 84, Mississippi Company Share Price, 1719–1720. Source Data: Antoin E. Murphy, John Law (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1997), 208.

Figure 3-2, page 96, South Sea Share Prices, 1719–1721. Source Data: Larry Neal, The Rise of Financial Capitalism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990), 233–234.

Figure 4-1, page 118, British Railway Share Prices 1830–1850. Source Data: Arthur D. Gayer, W.W. Rostow, and Anna Jacobsen Schwartz, The Growth and Fluctuation of the British Economy 1790–1850 (Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press, 1953), I:375.

Figure 7-1, page 187, Dow Jones Industrial Average 1925–1935. Source Data: http://stooq.com/q/?s=^dji, accessed November 6, 2019.

Figure 10-1, page 258, Evangelical Population of the United States. Source Data: Pew Foundation from https://www.theatlas.com/charts/JMn6Nk_nM, accessed March 11, 2020.

Figure 10-2, page 260, Belief in God among American Scientists 1914–1916. Source Data: James H. Leuba, The Belief in God and Immortality (Chicago: The Open Court Publishing Company, 1921), 255.

Figure 10-3, page 262, Hard News Knowledge versus Educational Level. Source Data: Source: James Curran et al., “Media System, Public Knowledge and Democracy: A Comparative Study,” European Journal of Communications Vol.  4, No. 1 (2009): 19 (Table 5).

Figure 13-1, page 305, Federal Funds Rate 1997–2000. Source Data: Federal Reserve Board, https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/FEDFUNDS, accessed February 20, 2019.

Figure 14-1, page 327, CNBC and Stock Prices. Source Data, J. Felix Meshcke, “CEO Appearances on CNBC,” working paper; and Ekaterina V. Karniouchina et al., “Impact of Mad Money Stock Recommendations: Merging Financial and Marketing Perspectives,” Journal of Marketing Vol. 73 (November 2009): 252 (Table 1).

Figure 14-2, page 337, NASDAQ Composite Index 1995–2003. Source Data: https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/%5EIXIC/history?p=%5EIXIC, accessed March 19, 2020.