I am curious. What would be a good research project on Austrian Economics?
Schools are labour camps.
An austrian view of the causes of poverty and inequality.
Austrian causes of boom and bust.
gold.
government.
markets.
private security.
education.
health care.
IP.
the list must be endless.
eliotn: I am curious. What would be a good research project on Austrian Economics?
broad or specific?
The parallels between the a priori methodology of praxeology and the emerging computational approach to physical science.
Microsecession as a strategy for revolution | Challenge to minarchist | How would a private road system work?
Stranger: The parallels between the a priori methodology of praxeology and the emerging computational approach to physical science.
Seconded.
I am becoming a Burkean Whig.
- F.A. Hayek
This is a question that I enjoy asking and I'm curious in the answers you get as well. I attended Mises University this past summer and I had the chance to ask the question in the panel on micro-economics. Here's the answers I got:
DiLorenzo: economics of taxation and public finance. Labor economics.
Block: "pick something you enjoy"
Klein: theory and practice of entreprenuership (currently a poor understanding in applied entrepeneurship in the economy). Theory of rent (see Fetter).
Herbner: interational trade.
Murphy: need to look at disequilibrium yet with predictible change.
I also attended the FEE Austrian Economics seminar this past summer and here are the answers I got when I asked Garrison, Horwitz, and White the question, plus some suggestions brought out during the lectures from other lecturers.:
Horwitz: look @ eHarmony, see why it is successful in terms of human capital. Regulatory and fiscal policy in relation to capital based macro.
Butos: what prevents scientific discovery from being commercialized? Is it possible How to assign property rights?
White: need to story out which cycles were caused by central banking and which were a result of technical shocks. Essentially, more work in ABCT.
There's also Mises' Suggested Research Topics which is available for download on the site and has some great stuff.
The parallels between cognitive science and the Austrian method and a praxeological account of the philosophy of science, broadly based on neo-Aristotelianism.
To darkness I condemn you...
The application of praxeology to areas such as sociology and politics.
"You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows"
Bob Dylan
Anything involving global warming. An enormous amount of public money is funneled into AGW research. If you linked anything Austrian, like studies of business cycles during periods global warming, you could probably get a ton of grant money.
You could increase knowledge, deprive the state of resources, and at the same time profit.
If you find something evil that wobbles, push it. - Gary North
Jon Irenicus: The parallels between cognitive science and the Austrian method and a praxeological account of the philosophy of science, broadly based on neo-Aristotelianism.
I believe that there was at least one philosopher of science considered part of the Austrian School; can't remember his name off the top of my head...
Market anarchist, Linux geek, aspiring Perl hacker, and student of the neo-Aristotelians, the classical individualist anarchists, and the Austrian school.
liberty student: eliotn: I am curious. What would be a good research project on Austrian Economics? Anything involving global warming. An enormous amount of public money is funneled into AGW research. If you linked anything Austrian, like studies of business cycles during periods global warming, you could probably get a ton of grant money. You could increase knowledge, deprive the state of resources, and at the same time profit.
sounds like a triple play.
Try?
laminustacitus: Stranger: The parallels between the a priori methodology of praxeology and the emerging computational approach to physical science. Seconded.
Third. Especially the work by Hayek regarding Spontaneous Order. This is used in everything from physics to neurology to explain or illustrate specific kinds of behaviors that were once considered random 'noise' in systems.
"The power of liberty going forward is in decentralization. Not in leaders, but in decentralized activism. In a market process." -- liberty student
Jon Irenicus: I believe that there was at least one philosopher of science considered part of the Austrian School; can't remember his name off the top of my head... Try?
Found it! Michael Polanyi. Long mentions him in Wittgenstein.
Ludwig von Mises Institute | 518 West Magnolia Avenue | Auburn, Alabama 36832-4528
Phone: 334.321.2100 · Fax: 334.321.2119
contact@Mises.org | webmaster | AOL-IM MainMises
Mises.org sitemap