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G.L.S. Shackle; George L. S. Shackle; G L S Shackle; GLS Shackle; George Shackle; George Lennox Sharman Shackle; George L.S. Shackle; George LS Shackle; George L S Shackle
non-conductor
MATERIAL WHOSE INTERNAL ELECTRIC CHARGES DO NOT FLOW FREELY, AND WHICH THEREFORE DOES NOT CONDUCT AN ELECTRIC CURRENT
·noun A substance which does not conduct, that is, convey or transmit, heat, electricity, sound, vibration, or the like, or which transmits them with difficulty; an insulator; as, wool is a nonconductor of heat; glass and dry wood are nonconductors of electricity.
Nonconducting
MATERIAL WHOSE INTERNAL ELECTRIC CHARGES DO NOT FLOW FREELY, AND WHICH THEREFORE DOES NOT CONDUCT AN ELECTRIC CURRENT
·adj Not conducting; not transmitting a fluid or force; thus, in electricity, wax is a nonconducting substance.
Wikipedia
G. L. S. Shackle
George Lennox Sharman Shackle (14 July 1903 – 3 March 1992) was an English economist. He made a practical attempt to challenge classical rational choice theory and has been characterised as a "post-Keynesian", though he is influenced as well by Austrian economics. Much of his work is associated with the Dempster–Shafer theory of evidence.