I've already posted 2 other questions and I thank you for the response to them. You're giving me lots of great things for my paper!
How did you come to subscribe to Austrian Economics?
I started getting into it when someone told me to watch the Zeitgeist video and I became aware of how the Federal Reserve operated...and here I am today!
-Tyler Jewell
By using my brain and refusing to take garbage seriously.
Freedom of markets is positively correlated with the degree of evolution in any society...
I came to AE via Ron Paul.
Jon Irenicus: By using my brain and refusing to take garbage seriously.
I bet you are a lot of fun at parties.
HA! Well put!
My interest in transhumanism and Extropy led me to Rand, which led me to Mises and Rothbard.
Market anarchist, Linux geek, aspiring Perl hacker, and student of the neo-Aristotelians, the classical individualist anarchists, and the Austrian school.
For me it was my studies in complexity and emergence, and AI theory that led me to the Austrian School (and Rand as well).
"The power of liberty going forward is in decentralization. Not in leaders, but in decentralized activism. In a market process." -- liberty student
Ron Paul.
I'd never heard those ideas formulated before seeing Ron Paul, and they just clicked with me instantly. The book 'Market for Liberty' lead me to mises.org where I found this incredible wealth of information, and I've been devouring it ever since.
Fun is anti-reason.
(I probably am though)
Tyler: I've already posted 2 other questions and I thank you for the response to them. You're giving me lots of great things for my paper! How did you come to subscribe to Austrian Economics? I started getting into it when someone told me to watch the Zeitgeist video and I became aware of how the Federal Reserve operated...and here I am today! -Tyler Jewell
"Look at me, I'm quoting another user to show how wrong I think they are, out of arrogance of my own position. Wait, this is my own quote, oh shi-" ~ Nitroadict
Same with me.
Came across http://www.campaignforliberty.com/
Peter Schiff
I came to AE by reading economics (smith,cantillon, bastiat, and turgot specifically) and thomistic theology. It is interesting to note how the methods of thomism are equal to the methods of AE. AE is also a more systematic and complete rendering of old classical economics and deserves to be truly called neoclassical.
Nitroadict: I realized I understood AE & the STV far more than I did with Keynesian Econ & the LTV (Labor Theory of Value)
This was a big turning point for me. One of the first things I did at Mises.org was stumble on a Rothbard presentation MP3, and he was explaining the STV vs. the LTV. And it just made sense. Like a lot of what Ron Paul said, just made sense. I probably listened to that MP3 three or four times.
And I am one of the least well read and educated people on this forum, but the practical nature of AE makes it so easy for people to learn. It's very attractive because (I think I might be paraphrasing Lew Rockwell or Tom Woods here), AE has the ability to explain the world in a simple logical manner and its truth telling power is very attractive.
And I suppose that is what happened to me. So much of my doublethink and confusion just dissolved once I started seeing things as they were, not as I was told to see them. I can honestly say that AE has improved my life, by empowering me through an epistemological approach to understand Human Action (praxeology).
It is interesting to note how the methods of thomism are equal to the methods of AE.
Insofar as it is an extension of Aristotelianism, right? There is a lot of overlap then, I agree.
By reading Money, Bank Credit, and Economic Cycles, and seeing my worldview on how money, banks, and credit works do a 180. This was after studying a lot of Keynesian and Monetarist crap in undergrad, and after years (wasted) reading the Wall Street Journal, Businessweek, the Economist, and other supposedly informed (about economics, at least) business publications.
Then it was further reading in Austrian economics and Mises.org that made me realize many other liberal views I held were wrong.
But it was a pretty fast journey after realizing the extraordinary chains placed on us by fractional reserve and central banking.