Carl Menger, Crown Prince Rudolf, and the Marginal Revolution That Never Was

Carl Menger is remembered today as the founder of the Austrian School of Economics and one of the most important economic thinkers in history. His 1871 masterpiece, Principles of Economics, launched what became known as the Marginal Revolution, overturning centuries of economic orthodoxy and fundamentally changing the way economists understand value, prices, and human action.

Praxeology within a Physics of the Social Sciences

Most critics of Austrian economics have little or no clue about the theory or what it explains. But it happens, albeit not often, that critics have at least cursory knowledge of the Austrian corpus. Such critics, far and wide between, tend to target Mises’s praxeology rather than the economic theory per se. They obviously consider the logic of action a low-hanging fruit. The problem is that they pick it from the wrong tree.

Joe1

Joseph Russo is a former technical analyst and retired autodidact whose interest in history, finance, Austrian econom