In the posts below I attach my summaries (in *.pdf) of a large part of the required readings for Mises University. Although the summaries are of course not perfect, I hope they can be of help to people attending Mises U.
best wishes,
Praxeology and Understanding (part 2), George Selgin
The Historical Setting of the Austrian School of Economics, Ludwig von Mises
Okay, I think that's it.
Because there is an upload limit of 64kb I had to split up the longer summaries, and I compressed all the pdf's big time.
Wow, this must have been a big project. Good work!
AnalyticalAnarchism.net - The Positive Political Economy of Anarchism
Incredible job. Well done.
Koen Swinkels: The Philosophical origins of Austrian Economics, David Gordon
The Philosophical origins of Austrian Economics, David Gordon
Thanks Koen,
I have a question about this one, for you or anybody else who could answer.
Gordon says,
"Logical positivism (Carnap, Karl Menger, Schlick, Neurath, etc.) attacked synthetic a priori and deductivism."
Menger was a positivist? That doesn't seem right. Also he was against deductivism? His method seemed highly deductive, as I wrote in my post Economic character of higher order goods and the deductive method of Menger.
Also Gordon says that methodological individualism stems from Aristotle. But he also says that Mises was not influenced by Aristotle. That doesn't seem to follow since, in Human Action, Mises explicitly promotes methodological individualism. Also the entire teleological approach of praxeology seems eminently Aristotelean.
Can someone resolve these cognitive dissonances for me?
Thanks.
Austrian Theory of the Business Cycle in 9 steps (Soliciting comments)
Karl Menger, the mathematician was the son of Carl Menger the Austrian economist and teacher of Bohm Bawerk.
"You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows"
Bob Dylan
Thanks Giles.
I thought the "K" was a typo.
Daniel J. Sanchez: Thanks Giles. I thought the "K" was a typo.
Lol, if it's from the Gordon paper, then it'd be amusing, since Gordon himself chastised somebody for calling the economist Karl Menger.
Daniel J. Sanchez: Koen Swinkels: The Philosophical origins of Austrian Economics, David Gordon Thanks Koen, I have a question about this one, for you or anybody else who could answer. Gordon says, "Logical positivism (Carnap, Karl Menger, Schlick, Neurath, etc.) attacked synthetic a priori and deductivism." Menger was a positivist? That doesn't seem right. Also he was against deductivism? His method seemed highly deductive, as I wrote in my post Economic character of higher order goods and the deductive method of Menger.
yeah, that's Karl, not Carl.
Also Gordon says that methodological individualism stems from Aristotle. But he also says that Mises was not influenced by Aristotle. That doesn't seem to follow since, in Human Action, Mises explicitly promotes methodological individualism.
but ideas around methodological individualism also occurred in Locke and Bentham, and many others. Schumpeter appears to have introduced the term itself, and since appr. the 1930s Austrians like Hayek, Machlup, and Mises started to use the term to apply to their own methodology (Schumpeter's use of the term was a bit different) Just sayin' that the influence need not have occured directly or even indirectly from Aristotle.
Check "Meanings of Methodological Individualism" by Hodgson (the above paragraph is based on that article)
Fantastic work. thank you
Publisher, Laissez-Faire Books
I think this should be pinned for all to post summaries of Austrian works, but great work to the OP.
Off topic: are you the same Koen Swinkels that Molyneux is so fond of?
Wow... that is a bit of work....
Thanks for posting this, I have already read a couple, it is helping a lot with my understanding....
It sounds like the ocean, smells like fresh mountain air, and tastes like the union of peanut butter and chocolate. ~Liberty Student
GilesStratton: I think this should be pinned for all to post summaries of Austrian works, but great work to the OP.
thanks!
Yeah, that's me. Our BFF badges were taken away some years ago.