14. The Epistemological Features of History
From Theory and History Part Three, “Epistemological Problems of History”. Narrated by John Pruden.
From Theory and History Part Three, “Epistemological Problems of History”. Narrated by John Pruden.
From Theory and History Part Three, “Epistemological Problems of History”. Narrated by John Pruden.
There is no such thing as interests independent of ideas, preceding them temporally and logically.
From Theory and History Part Three, “Epistemological Problems of History”. Narrated by John Pruden.
From Theory and History Part Four, “The Course of History”. Narrated by John Pruden.
From Theory and History Part Three, “Epistemological Problems of History”. Narrated by John Pruden.
Milgram reflected on Etienne de La Boetie's key insight about the politics of authority, the will to bondage, and the eager embrace of voluntary servitude. He devised an ingenious test for their influence on the ordinary individual...
These documents are a joyful alternative career of Rothbard’s writings and research, and as such inherently one of the most valuable (and mos
Critics condemn economic theory for disregarding the role that power plays in real life.
Marx and Engels, two men of unquestionable bourgeois background, hatched the class ideology of the proletarian class.
Fahrenheit 451 acknowledges that powerful impulses toward mindless conformity and suppression of deviation exist in the population itself — that, on a deep level, many, many people want to be "protected" by the state from the risk of being offended and from the necessity of thinking...
It is good luck for the laborer if market conditions are such that a kind of work he is able to perform is lavishly remunerated; it is chance, not
Men of influential and privileged status are rarely inclined to toss all their privileges aside to engage in the lonely and dangerous task of worki