Subjectivism is the philosophy that reality is what we perceive to be real and that no underlying, true reality exists independent of human perception. In other words, the nature of reality for an individual person is dependent on that individual's own consciousness. It follows that each person experiences...
Posted to
Hera
by
Ron Hera
on
Sun, Jul 1 2012
Filed under:
Filed under: Federal reserve, Euro, Alan Greenspan, U.S. dollar, gold standard, John Maynard Keynes, British pound, European Central Bank, Japanese yen, counterparty, Subjectivism. Objectivism, Aynd Rand, moral hazard, price stability, central banking, confidence, economic volatility, economic rent seeking, Bank of England, Bank of Japan, currency debasement, fiat money, Austrian economics, François-Marie Arouet de Voltaire
I know what I'm writing here is heresy. At least it is for the supposed to rule us well deledefs in Germany. Anyway here we go Now can we rely on actual an currently working renewable energy? Well the depressing answer is "no". We can't . Neither wind nor sun is guaranteed to work every...
Well I do not know how many of you can associate Ludwig Erhardt with something. However a books published in 1957 and now in it's eights or so edition. Still is as actual and valid as before. The most prominent example: "Price stability should be considered a base human right" Why is that...
The Federal Reserve, Price Stability, and CPI by Alex Merced While here at LibertyisNow.com I've been discussing several economic and philosohical concepts regarding individualism and Liberty, no war is won over night yet strewn across many hard fought battles. The battle at hand is similar to the...
Posted to
AlexMerced
by
Alex Merced
on
Thu, Aug 12 2010
Filed under:
Filed under: Federal Reserve, Austrian Economics, 1870, 1920, Andrew Jackson, Macroeconomics, CPI, Martin Van Buren, Microeconomics, Price Stability, History, 1913, 1929, Full Employment