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- Philosophy and Methodology
- World History
Media Asset
Author:
Murray N. Rothbard
Online Publish Date:
From the Libertarian Heritage Series, sponsored by the Center for Libertarian Studies. Recorded on October 16, 1981.
Media Asset
Author:
Murray N. Rothbard
Online Publish Date:
The Whig Theory of History as developed in the 19th century still dominates textbooks today. The Whigs say that history is an inevitable march upward, always improving. The idea is that knowledge is never lost, instead knowledge continues building and adding. This has not been true for history, science, or economics. Contrary to the accepted
Media Asset
Author:
Murray N. Rothbard
Online Publish Date:
The rebels’ overriding grievance was against the tax farmers and tax officials: “It is they who have forced [the peasants] to take up arms, changing their ploughshares for swords, in order to ask Your Majesty for justice or else to die like men.” This audio Mises Daily is narrated by Jeff
Media Asset
Author:
Murray N. Rothbard
Online Publish Date:
Free trade and free markets, through the harmony of reciprocal benefits, advance the interest and happiness of all by each seeking his own personal utility and self-interest, writes Murray N. Rothbard (1926–1995). This audio Mises Daily is narrated by Jeff
Media Asset
Author:
Murray N. Rothbard
Online Publish Date:
Like today’s central bankers, John Law proposed to “supply the nation” with a sufficiency of money. The increased money was supposed to vivify trade and increase employment and production — the “employment” motif providing a nice proto-Keynesian touch, writes Murray N. Rothbard (1926–1995). This audio Mises Daily is narrated by Jeff
Media Asset
Author:
Murray N. Rothbard
Online Publish Date:
The first self-conscious school of economic thought developed in France shortly after the publication of Cantillon’s Essai . They called themselves “the economists” but later came to be called the “physiocrats,” after their prime politico-economical principle: physiocracy (the rule of nature), writes Murray N. Rothbard (1926–1995). This audio
Media Asset
Author:
Murray N. Rothbard
Online Publish Date:
It is theoretically conceivable but scarcely likely that the ruling class will rush to embrace a philosophy and a political economy that will end their power and put them, in effect, out of business, writes Murray N. Rothbard (1926–1995). This audio Mises Daily is narrated by Jeff