Principles of Economics by Carl Menger

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PREFACE
THE IMPARTIAL
OBSERVER CAN have no doubt about the reason our generation pays general
and enthusiastic tribute to progress in the field of the natural
sciences, while economic science receives little attention and its
value is seriously questioned by the very men in society to whom it
should provide a guide for practical action.
Never was there an age that placed economic interests higher than does
our own. Never was the need of a scientific foundation for economic
affairs felt more generally or more acutely. And never was the ability
of practical men to utilize the achievements of science, in all fields
of human activity, greater than in our day. If practical men,
therefore, rely wholly on their own experience, and disregard our
science in its present state of development, it cannot be due to a lack
of serious interest or ability on their part. Nor can their disregard
be the result of a haughty rejection of the deeper insight a true
science would give into the circumstances and relationships determining
the outcome of their activity. The cause of such remarkable
indifference must not be sought elsewhere than in the present state of
our science itself, in the sterility of all past endeavors to find its
empirical foundations.
Every new attempt in this direction, however modest the effort,
contains its own justification. To aim at the discovery of the
fundamentals of our science is to devote one’s abilities to the
solution of a problem that is directly related to human welfare, to
serve a public interest of the highest importance, and to enter a path
where even error is not entirely without merit.
In order to avoid any justifiable doubts on the part of experts, we
must not, in such an enterprise, neglect to pay careful attention to
past work in all the fields of our science thus far explored. Nor can
we abstain from applying criticism, with full independence of judgment,
to the opinions of our predecessors, and even to doctrines until now
considered definitive attainments of our science. Were we to fail in
the first task, we would abandon lightly the whole sum of experience
collected by the many excellent minds of all peoples and of all times
who have attempted to achieve the same end. Should we fail in the
second, we would renounce from the beginning any hope of a fundamental
reform of the foundations of our science. These dangers can be evaded
by making the views of our predecessors our own, though only after an
unhesitating examination, and by appealing from doctrine to experience,
from the thoughts of men to the nature of things.
This is the ground on which I stand. In what follows I have
endeavored to reduce the complex phenomena of human economic activity
to the simplest elements that can still be subjected to accurate
observation, to apply to these elements the measure corresponding to
their nature, and constantly adhering to this measure, to investigate
the manner in which the more complex economic phenomena evolve from
their elements according to definite principles.
This method of research, attaining universal acceptance in the natural
sciences, led to very great results, and on this account came
mistakenly to be called the natural-scientific method. It is, in
reality, a method common to all fields of empirical knowledge, and
should properly be called the empirical method. The distinction is
important because every method of investigation acquires its own
specific character from the nature of the field of knowledge to which
it is applied. It would be improper, accordingly, to attempt a
natural-scientific orientation of our science.
Past attempts to carry over the peculiarities of the natural-scientific
method of investigation uncritically into economics have led to most
serious methodological errors, and to idle play with external analogies
between the phenomena of economics and those of nature. Bacon said of
scholars of this description: “Magna cum vanitate
et desipientia manes similitudines
et sympathies rerum describunt
atque etiam quandoque affingunt,”
a statement which, strangely enough, is
still true today of precisely those writers on economic subjects who
continue to call themselves disciples of Bacon while they completely
misunderstand the spirit of his method.
If it is stated, in justification of these efforts, that the task of
our age is to establish the interconnections between all fields of
science and to unify their most important principles, I should like to
question seriously the qualifications of our contemporaries to solve
this problem. I believe that scholars in the various fields of science
can never lose sight of this common goal of their endeavors without
damage to their research. But the solution of this problem can be taken
up successfully only when the several fields of knowledge have been
examined most carefully, and when the laws peculiar to each field have
been discovered.
It is now the task of the reader to judge to what results the method of
investigation I have adopted has led, and whether I have been able to
demonstrate successfully that the phenomena of economic life, like
those of nature, are ordered strictly in accordance with definite laws.
Before closing, however, I wish to contest the opinion of those who
question the existence of laws of economic behavior by referring to
human free will, since their argument would deny economics altogether
the status of an exact science.
Whether and under what conditions a thing is useful to me,
whether and under what conditions it is a good, whether and
under what conditions it is an economic good, whether and under
what conditions it possesses value for me and how large the measure
of this value is for me, whether and under what conditions an economic
exchange of goods will take place between two economizing
individuals, and the limits within which a price can be
established if an exchange does occur—these and many other matters are
fully as independent of my will as any law of chemistry is of the will
of the practicing chemist. The view adopted by these persons rests,
therefore, on an easily discernible error about the proper field of our
science. For economic theory is concerned, not with practical rules for
economic activity, but with the conditions under which
men engage in provident activity directed to the satisfaction of their
needs.
Economic theory is related to the practical activities of economizing
men
in much the same way that chemistry is
related to the operations of the practical chemist. Although reference
to freedom of the human will may well be legitimate as an objection to
the complete predictability of economic activity, it can never have
force as a denial of the conformity to definite laws of phenomena that
condition the outcome of the economic activity of men and are entirely
independent of the human will. It is precisely phenomena of this
description, however, which are the objects of study in our science.
I have devoted special attention to the investigation of the causal
connections between economic phenomena involving products and the
corresponding agents of production, not only for the purpose of
establishing a price theory based upon reality and placing all price
phenomena (including interest, wages, ground rent, etc.) together under
one unified point of view, but also because of the important insights
we thereby gain into many other economic processes heretofore
completely misunderstood. This is the very branch of our science,
moreover, in which the events of economic life most distinctly appear
to obey regular laws.
It was a special pleasure to me that the field here treated, comprising
the most general principles of our science, is in no small degree so
truly the product of recent development in German political economy,
and that the reform of the most important principles of our science
here attempted is therefore built upon a foundation laid by previous
work that was produced almost entirely by the industry of German
scholars.
Let this work be regarded, therefore, as a friendly greeting from a
collaborator in Austria, and as a faint echo of the scientific
suggestions so abundantly lavished on us Austrians by Germany through
the many outstanding scholars she has sent us and through her excellent
publications.
DR. CARL MENGER
Menger uses an editorial “we” throughout. In
conformity with modern usage, we have converted Menger’s
references to himself from the first person plural to the first person
singular.—TR.
Francis Bacon, NovumtOrganum,
II, 27
In The Philosophical Works of Francis
Bacon, translated by Ellis and Spedding,
edited by John M. Robertson, London, 1905, pp. 334–5, this passage
reads as follows: “similitudes and
sympathies of things that have no reality, . . . they describe and
sometimes invent with great vanity and folly.”—TR.
The terms “wirtschaftender
Mensch,” “wirtschaftendes
Individuum,” and “wirtschaftende Person” occur continually
throughout the work. The adjective “wirtschaftend”
does not refer to the properties or motives of individuals but to the
activity in which they are engaged. More specifically, it does not
refer to “the profit motive” or to “the pursuit of self-interest,” but
to the act of economizing.—TR.
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