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This book explores the neglected contribution of the American and
English "psychological" school to economic theory, especially to
the development and refinement of the Austrian school of economics.
It argues that Frank Knight, Frank Fetter, Herbert Davenport,
Philip Wicksteed and J.B. Clark among others improved on the
original Austrian theory by Menger and Bohm-Bawerk by providing a
coherent subjectivist foundation for the theories of production and
distribution. They succeeded where economic theory before them
failed - to develop the theories of interest, profit, wages and
rents based solely on the principles of subjective value and
marginal utility, eschewing the last remnants of the old cost of
production models. This book represents a look at what mainstream
economic theory might have looked like had the erasure of Mengerian
Austrian price theory by Marshallian and Walrasian thoeries not
taken place, and had the improvements and refinements of the
Mengerian tradition, itself done by the Anglo-Saxon followers of
Menger, been fully appropriated.
This book presents the case that the origins of American liberty
should not be sought in the constitutional-reformist feats of its
"statesmen" during the 1780s, but rather in the political and
social resistance to their efforts. There were two revolutions
occurring in the late 18th century America: the modern European
revolution "in favour of government," pursuing national unity,
"energetic" government and centralization of power (what scholars
usually dub "American founding"); and a conservative, reactionary
counter-revolution "in favour of liberty," defending local rights
and liberal individualism against the encroaching political
authority. This is a book about this liberal counter-revolution and
its ideological, political and cultural sources and central
protagonists. The central analytical argument of the book is that
America before the Revolution was a stateless, spontaneous
political order that evolved culturally, politically and
economically in isolation from the modern European trends of
state-building and centralization of power. The book argues, then,
that a better model for understanding America is a "decoupled
modernization" hypothesis, in which social modernity is divested
from the politics of modern state and tied with the pre-modern
social institutions.
This book explores the neglected contribution of the American and
English "psychological" school to economic theory, especially to
the development and refinement of the Austrian school of economics.
It argues that Frank Knight, Frank Fetter, Herbert Davenport,
Philip Wicksteed and J.B. Clark among others improved on the
original Austrian theory by Menger and Bohm-Bawerk by providing a
coherent subjectivist foundation for the theories of production and
distribution. They succeeded where economic theory before them
failed - to develop the theories of interest, profit, wages and
rents based solely on the principles of subjective value and
marginal utility, eschewing the last remnants of the old cost of
production models. This book represents a look at what mainstream
economic theory might have looked like had the erasure of Mengerian
Austrian price theory by Marshallian and Walrasian thoeries not
taken place, and had the improvements and refinements of the
Mengerian tradition, itself done by the Anglo-Saxon followers of
Menger, been fully appropriated.
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