The Driving Force of the Collective
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The Driving Force of the Collective

Post-Austrian Theory in Response to Israel Kirzner
 eBook
Sofort lieferbar | Lieferzeit: Sofort lieferbar I
ISBN-13:
9781137468390
Veröffentl:
2016
Einband:
eBook
Seiten:
294
Autor:
Guinevere Liberty Nell
eBook Typ:
PDF
eBook Format:
Reflowable eBook
Kopierschutz:
Digital Watermark [Social-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

This book investigates why Austrian economists fail to apply the spontaneous order framework to cooperative relationships - such as a dynamic and evolving public sector - that might complement a thriving market. In direct response to Israel Kirzner's The Driving Force of the Market, Nell challenges traditional Austrian economics by proposing "e;democratic process theory"e; as a parallel to market process theory, highlighting the possibilities for an economic organization that harnesses the power of transparent and effective democracy. Keeping in mind the central problems experienced in socialist and capitalist countries due to self-interested political and economic actors, The Driving Force of the Collective highlights the public sector advantages of allowing culture and institutions to evolve endogenously as a spontaneous public sector order.
This book investigates why Austrian economists fail to apply the spontaneous order framework to cooperative relationships – such as a dynamic and evolving public sector – that might complement a thriving market. In direct response to Israel Kirzner'sThe Driving Force of the Market, Nell challenges traditional Austrian economics by proposing "democratic process theory" as a parallel to market process theory, highlighting the possibilities for an economic organization that harnesses the power of transparent and effective democracy. Keeping in mind the central problems experienced in socialist and capitalist countries due to self-interested political and economic actorsThe Driving Force of the Collective highlights the public sector advantages of allowing culture and institutions to evolve endogenously as a spontaneous public sector order.
1. Collaborative Discovery and the Conversive Democratic Process: A Post-Austrian Approach
2. The Individualist Subjectivism of Austrian Economics
3. Subjectivism, Freedom, and Social-Interest
4. The Limits of Democracy: The Real and the Imagined
5. The Ethics of Competition and Cooperation
6. Some Ethical Insights on the Nature of Profits
7. Coordination and Collaboration: Agreement as a Criterion for Democratic Goodness
8. Reflections on the Misesian Legacy of Hyper-Individualism
9. Knowledge and the Austrian Understanding of the Democratic System
10. Culture, Hayek, and the idea of Plan-Coordination
11. Conversation and the Democratic Process: Some Doctrinal Touchstones
12. The Driving Force of the Collective: The Idea of “Conversation” in Contemporary Economic Theory and in the Post-Austrian Theory of the Democratic Process
13. Misallocation and/or Misunderstood: A Reconsideration of the Misesian Calculation Problem
14. Society, the Collective, and Economic "Imperialism"

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