Mises Review, now online, is a quarterly review of the literature in economics, politics, philosophy, and law. Edited by David Gordon.
Irrepressible Rothbard: The Rothbard-Rockwell Report Essays, by Murray Rothbard
This indispensable selection of articles that Murray Rothbard wrote for the Rothbard-Rockwell Report contains the most insightful comment on foreign policy I have ever read. In a few paragraphs, Rothbard destroys the prevailing doctrine
Forced Into Glory: Abraham Lincoln’s White Dream, by Lerone Bennett, Jr.
The Swiss scholar Eduard Fueter once observed that every historian must decide whether he wishes to write from the perspective of his own time, or from the perspective of those whom he is studying.
The Law of Peoples, by John Rawls
For once, John Rawls has managed to say something sensible. When Rawls published A Theory of Justice in 1971, he soon found himself the most famous political philosopher in the world.
If You’re an Egalitarian, How Come You’re So Rich?, by G.A. Cohen
Cohen has a great philosophical virtue. He constantly raises major difficulties for the bad ethical and political doctrines that he professes.
From Subsistence to Exchange and Other Essays, by Peter Bauer
Peter Bauer possesses a rare ability: he can see the obvious. Several philosophers discussed in this issue-Rawls, Dworkin, and Cohen -rail on and on about equality.
The Trouble With Principle, by Stanley Fish
I expected to dislike this book. Stanley Fish, the author of distinguished books on Milton and George Herbert, long ago found the world of literary scholarship too confining.
The Why of World War I, by Ralph Raico
The second edition of this outstanding book includes two new chapters, one of which merits extensive notice. In "World War I: The Turning Point," Ralph Raico brilliantly encapsulates the origins of the Great War,
Vietnam: The Necessary War, Michael Lind
Almost everyone today thinks that America's war in Vietnam was a mistake. Whether leftists who revere Uncle Ho, rightwing hawks who regret that America was not allowed to win, or noninterventionists
Freud and the Question of Pseudoscience, by Frank Cioffi
The validity of Freud's theories seems at first sight far removed from the usual concerns of The Mises Review. In fact, it is not. Freud mounted a strong attack on morality and tradition.
When in the Course of Human Events: Arguing the Case for Southern Secession, by Charles Adams
Charles Adams manifests in this excellent book a rare talent-he asks intelligent historical questions. Many today portray the Civil War as a struggle to end slavery.
Economics and the Good Life: Essays on Political Economy, by Bertrand de Jouvenel
Many people have wondered why modern intellectuals hate capitalism. In "The Treatment of Capitalism by Continental Intellectuals," one of the essays included in Professors Hale's and Landy's excellent collection,
Selected Essays of Frank Knight, by Frank Knight
Frank Knight complicates things in interesting ways. He first argues for a free economy in a way that Austrians can only applaud.
Collected Works of Eric Voegelin, by Eric Voegelin
Among many American conservatives, Eric Voegelin ranks as one of the greatest philosophers of the twentieth century. Even the merest glance at the present selection of his essays suffices to show the qualities that impressed,
The Rise and Decline of the State, by Martin van Creveld
Martin van Creveld's outstanding book traces the origin, growth, and decline of what Nietzsche termed "that coldest of all cold monsters, the state." By "state," our author means something more limited than do contemporary libertarians.
Philosophy and Social Hope, by Richard Rorty
Richard Rorty is a man possessed. Like his grandfather, the Social Gospel theologian Walter Rauschenbusch, he knows what ails the world and how we may ascend to the secular equivalent of paradise.
Against the Idols of the Age, by David Stone
The present anthology of David Stove articles is an excellent book throughout, but I should like first to concentrate on a few pages that make a decisive contribution to contemporary thought.
Hard Green: Saving the Environment From the Environmentalists, by Peter Huber
Peter Huber's valuable book relies in part on a questionable premise, but this very dependence makes possible its key contribution.
Property and Freedom, by Richard Pipes
Mr. Pipes has written a very good book, but he has made life difficult for me as a reviewer. He defends the importance of property rights throughout the book, but he does not argue systematically,
Public Finance and Public Choice-Two Contrasting Visions of the State, by James Buchanan and Richard Musgrave
In March, 1998, a series of public discussions between James Buchanan and Richard Musgrave took place at the University of Munich; these along with questions from the audience and an Introduction and Conclusion by Hans-Werner Sinn,
Power and Prosperity, by Mancur Olson
Mancur Olson's new book resolves for me a major mystery. As all readers of The Mises Review know, socialism is an unworkable system. Mises conclusively demonstrated that a centrally planned economy cannot calculate rationally;