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Who got to meet Mises, Rothbard, Hayek?

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ViennaSausage posted on Thu, Jul 22 2010 3:27 PM

Anyone on this board had the opportunity to meet Mises, Rothbard, or Hayek?

If so what were your impressions?

Or, which of the current living Austrians actually got to meet and/or study under any of the above?

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Answered (Verified) Zeo285 replied on Sun, Jul 25 2010 6:26 AM
Verified by ViennaSausage

@ Jeremiah

"One of the (very few, perhaps the only) problems I have with the publication output of Murray N. Rothbard is that he never wrote his autobiography." Walter Block

 

I completely agree.

I did find the book that mike spoke of (or atlest i think it is)

http://mises.org/books/memoriam.pdf

There is always this great talk by Walter block

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HtYH77bxeCU

My guess is you've seen them already if so I'll try and source more stuff for ya.

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Ralph Raico met all three. I can think of a few that met two but not sure how many are still around that met and knew all three.

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Raico is an interesting fellow.  It's interesting to note the divergence Raico, Reisman, Rothbard, took from Mises.

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He isn't in your list, but I did get to meet Ron Paul. Best moment of my life.

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Ron Paul rocks!  Ron Paul 2012?

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Definitely Ron Paul 2012.

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ViennaSausage:

Raico is an interesting fellow.  It's interesting to note the divergence Raico, Reisman, Rothbard, took from Mises.

 

I was really hoping to meet Dr. Raico at Mises U this year but sadly he will not be there. I think that he would fascinate me to no end. He has such a mastery of the social sciences that I cannot help but idolize him.  

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Hate to break it to you guys but the Earth will hit the Moon before the Federal Government lets Ron Paul strip them of their power.

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*not meaning to hijack the thread*

I really wish there was more information about Murray Rothbards life. I have read everything relating to life that i could find and i still have so many questions.

I remember overhearing someone say that Rothbard had books from wall to wall in his apartment and when people came to visit he was always moving stacks of books around the room so people could sit down...if find things like that so interesting.

Read until you have something to write...Write until you have nothing to write...when you have nothing to write, read...read until you have something to write...Jeremiah 

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...if find things like that so interesting.

I feel the exact same way when it comes to fiction authors.

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"*not meaning to hijack the thread*" Hijack away. That's what this thread is for:). What great personal stories do folks have with Mises, Hayek, Rothbard? Or what have you heard about their antics and personal lives from credible sources?

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Answered (Not Verified) Fephisto replied on Sat, Jul 24 2010 10:05 PM
Suggested by viresh amin

I really wish there was more information about Murray Rothbards life. I have read everything relating to life that i could find and i still have so many questions.

I remember overhearing someone say that Rothbard had books from wall to wall in his apartment and when people came to visit he was always moving stacks of books around the room so people could sit down...if find things like that so interesting.

How.  Do.  These.  Guys.  Manage.  To.  Be.  So.  Productive?!

 

That's what I want to know.

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Ronald Hamowy on Rothbards productivity:

"Everyone familiar with Rothbard’s writings is aware that he wrote a truly prodigious amount. What is not as well known is that he seems to have totally mastered the literature in those fields in which he had an interest. He had a vast library and unlike the books in my own library, all of Murray’s books had been read, and read with care. All one need do is scan a book out of Murray’s library and he will find marginal comments in Murray’s hands scribbled on each page (”Bull____!,” “Ugh!” “Right on!”, etc.) and that almost every line on every page was underlined. One of the great mysteries for all who knew him, at least at the outset, was where on earth he found the time to turn out the dozens of books, hundreds of articles, and literally thousands of letters he wrote and on top of it to read so much. In addition to have written a massive amount he seemed to have read everything that came within his grasp, newspapers, magazines, journals, newsletters, even flyers and advertisers.

I discovered the answer to this conundrum one day when reading an interview with W. Somerset Maugham, who was asked how he could turn out so many novels and short stories when he partied every evening. His reply was that if he devoted only four hours a day to writing, he’d be able to produce three or four pages each day. That meant, he pointed out, that if he were to keep to that schedule regularly, he could produce no less than 1,000 pages a year! I don’t mean to suggest that Murray’s schedule was the same as was Maugham’s, but he certainly devoted a good part of almost every day to reading and writing and even if he spent his evenings in conversation and otherwise enjoying the company of his friends, that left him each afternoon in which to work, which he did religiously. I don’t recall ever going over to his apartment without finding him in the midst of either reading or writing."

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Mike replied on Sat, Jul 24 2010 11:04 PM

@jeremiah

 

a while back when I was in my rothbard obsession mode, I found, I think on Lew Rockwell,   a collection of ulogy type writings by dozens of austrians written after his death. i found it pretty interesting

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We must get them to understand that government solutions are the problem!

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Answered (Verified) Zeo285 replied on Sun, Jul 25 2010 6:26 AM
Verified by ViennaSausage

@ Jeremiah

"One of the (very few, perhaps the only) problems I have with the publication output of Murray N. Rothbard is that he never wrote his autobiography." Walter Block

 

I completely agree.

I did find the book that mike spoke of (or atlest i think it is)

http://mises.org/books/memoriam.pdf

There is always this great talk by Walter block

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HtYH77bxeCU

My guess is you've seen them already if so I'll try and source more stuff for ya.

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