History of the Austrian School of Economics

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Robert B. Ekelund, Jr.

Ludwig H. Mai was an amalgam of intellectual influences. Most certainly he was partly an Austrian "fellow traveler" — one who had deep respect for Carl Menger and Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk

Claude Frédéric Bastiat

The State applies itself to loading everybody’s brain with prejudices, and everybody’s heart with sentiments favorable to the spirit of anarchy, war, and hatred;

Mark Brandly

Carl Menger, the founder of the Austrian School of economics, was instrumental in developing the Austrian analytical framework. However, the foundation of Austrian theory predates Menger by centuries. 

Jeffrey A. Tucker

This paper seeks to present Mises’s views on cultural questions as well as his belief that certain cultural institutions are buttressed by a

Murray N. Rothbard

That Ludwig von Mises was the outstanding champion of laizes-faire and the free-market economy in this century is well know and needs no d

Ronald Hamowy

The nature of political discourse has been significantly altered by the events of recent history, among which has been an accelerating shift of gov

Wendy McElroy

Individualist anarchism in America of the late nineteenth century revolved around and was expressed through Liberty, a periodical publishe

Walter Block

The work of Hayek, in contrast with the Marxist-Socialist-Interventionist-Galbraithian paradigm that held sway in the mid-20th century, appears as

John N. Gray

One of the most salutary results of the recent revival of scholarly interest in the intellectual traditions of classical liberalism is that F.A.

Robert F. Hébert

Can anyone take seriously the question posed by the title of this paper? History clearly reveals the following facts.