Without A Prayer, by John Robbins
ohn Robbins begins with an excellent idea, but unfortunately his book does not fulfill the promise of his initial project.
ohn Robbins begins with an excellent idea, but unfortunately his book does not fulfill the promise of his initial project.
Let me set readers' minds at ease. As most people will have heard, our distinguished author has recently found the gender in which he was born overly confining.
For once a publisher's blurb does not exaggerate. The Economics of Time and Ignorance has indeed been "one of the seminal works in modern Austrian economics" and the book's welcome reissue, with a new introduction, offers an opportunity for its examination here.
A familiar Austrian criticism of mainstream neoclassical economics is that it lacks touch with reality.
This book gets off to a bad start. The editor, David L. Prychitko, ardently supports a particular sort of interpretation theory, hermeneutics, particularly as developed by Hans-Georg Gadamer and Paul Ricoeur.
As any reader in the tradition will know, Austrian economics has deep links to philosophy.
Raimondo Cubeddu approaches Austrian economics from an interesting angle. He asks: what implications does it have for political theory?
The hottest new topic in mathematics, physics, and allied sciences is "chaos theory." It is radical in its implications, but no one can accuse its practitioners of being anti- mathematical, since its highly complex math, including advanced computer graphics, is on the cutting edge of mathematical theory.
Mises explains why socialism always fails due to the absence of a free market pricing structure for capital goods.