The Essential Problems of Human Existence
There is only one thing that is certain about the individual's future & death.
There is only one thing that is certain about the individual's future & death.
There's a strange phenomenon unique to modern Austrian economics as an intellectual movement.
Two questions as we go to the marketplace: whether or not to exchange, and if so, on what terms.
No reader of these essays can fail to note one respect in which Leland Yeager resembles two quintessential Austrian economists, Mises and Rothbard.
The saying that things may work nicely in theory, but do not necessarily work in practice is well known, but there's good theory and bad theory.
Economics is <em>not</em> a dry subject. It is <em>not</em> a dismal subject. It is <em>not</em> about statistics. It is about human life.
Living Economics by Peter J. Boettke merits the attention of all students of Austrian economics.
A particularly outstanding feature of J.B. Say's treatise is that he was the first economist to think deeply about the proper methodology of his discipline.
If we had to condense Ludwig von Mises's methodological position, we would have to phrase the question as follows: "How is economics possible?"