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Notes and Recollections: With the Historical Setting of Austrian School Economics
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Notes and Recollections: With the Historical Setting of Austrian School Economics
Current price: $22.00
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Barnes and Noble
Notes and Recollections: With the Historical Setting of Austrian School Economics
Current price: $22.00
Size: Hardcover
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Published for the first time together in one volume is Ludwig von Mises’s
Notes and Recollections
with
The Historical Setting of the Austrian School of Economics
.
Written between 1940 and 1941, shortly after he arrived in the United States,
is in effect Mises’s pre-1940 intellectual autobiography. This work reveals how Mises developed his theories, wrote his books, lectured, and taught; it describes his life in Vienna and the people with whom he worked. He also discusses his activities as an adviser to Austrian government officials and his frustrations in attempting to keep inflation and communist and Nazi ideas from destroying the Austrian economy.
is an essay originally published in English in 1969 that reveals Mises’s intellectual development in the context of the origins of the Austrian School. It serves as a good introduction to the theory and history of the Austrian School.
As Mises explains in these two works, his viewpoint that modern economics is based on subjective value and marginal-utility theory separated him from classical economists such as Adam Smith, David Ricardo, and John Stuart Mill.
Notes and Recollections
with
The Historical Setting of the Austrian School of Economics
.
Written between 1940 and 1941, shortly after he arrived in the United States,
is in effect Mises’s pre-1940 intellectual autobiography. This work reveals how Mises developed his theories, wrote his books, lectured, and taught; it describes his life in Vienna and the people with whom he worked. He also discusses his activities as an adviser to Austrian government officials and his frustrations in attempting to keep inflation and communist and Nazi ideas from destroying the Austrian economy.
is an essay originally published in English in 1969 that reveals Mises’s intellectual development in the context of the origins of the Austrian School. It serves as a good introduction to the theory and history of the Austrian School.
As Mises explains in these two works, his viewpoint that modern economics is based on subjective value and marginal-utility theory separated him from classical economists such as Adam Smith, David Ricardo, and John Stuart Mill.