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Grenznutzen und Wirtschaftsrechnung

1924

by Schönfeld Illy

Austrian SchoolEconomic CalculationEugen von Bohm-BawerkFriedrich A. HayekFriedrich von WieserLudwig von MisesMarginal UtilityPrice TheoryScarcityTeleologyUtilityOpportunity CostJoseph SchumpeterMathematical EconomicsSubjective ValueVilfredo ParetoHans MayerKnut WicksellEquilibriumOthmar SpannMethodologyEconomic GoodsComplementary GoodsHermann Heinrich GossenCarl MengerMarginalismLeon WalrasWilliam Stanley Jevons

Table of Contents · 49 segments

1
Front Matter and Publication Databibliography
2
Foreword by Kurt R. Leubeessay
3
Original 1924 Title Page and Table of Contentsbibliography
4
Part I, Section 1: Utility, Economizing, and Economic Calculationtheoretical
5
Total Economic Utility and Individual Utilitytheoretical
6
The Basic Idea of Dependent Utilitytheoretical
7
Utility Measurementtheoretical
8
Section 5: Comparing Utility Magnitudestheoretical
9
Section 6: Determinants of the Magnitude of Utilitytheoretical
10
Section 7: Practical Limits of Utility Estimationchapter
11
General Principles of Utility Appraisal in Economic Calculationchapter
12
Utility and the Quantitativetheoretical
13
Utility Gain and Economic Calculation, with Transition to Part IItheoretical
14
Section 1: On the Method of the Theory of Economic Calculationtheoretical
15
The Simplest Economic Systemtheoretical
16
Wieser’s Isolated Household and Marginal Utility Ruletheoretical
17
Concept and Economic Service of Marginal Utilitytheoretical
18
The Insufficiency of Defining Marginal Utility After Calculationtheoretical
19
Why the Critique Is Directed at Wiesertheoretical
20
Opening of the Theoretically Developed Economic Calculationtheoretical
21
Pairwise Comparison and the Ordered Series of Disposition Combinationstheoretical
22
Diagrammatic Representation, Mathematical Method, and Utility Indicestheoretical
23
Equivalence of Individual-Utility and Total-Utility Comparisonstheoretical
24
Methodological Status of Utility Formulas and Transition Beyond the Developed Proceduretheoretical
25
Part-Quantity Orders in Theoretical Economic Calculationtheoretical
26
Subsection 2: The Last Partial Quantity in the Ordering of Partial Quantitiestheoretical
27
On Partial Utility Orderstheoretical
28
The Last Partial Utility in the Partial Utility Order: The Law of Partial Utility Orderstheoretical
29
Formal Scope of Gossen’s Law and Divisible Needstheoretical
30
Need Intervals and Economic Periodstheoretical
31
Partial Utility Orders Across Multiple Need Intervalstheoretical
32
Extended Ordering of Partial Utilities Across Multiple Need Periodstheoretical
33
Conditions for Partial-Utility Orderings under Gossen’s Lawtheoretical
34
Weakening Gossen's Law into the General Law of Partial-Utility Orderstheoretical
35
Compound Partial Utility Orders and Their Preconditionstheoretical
36
Partial Utility Orders, Utility Scales, and Gossen’s Lawtheoretical
37
Objections to Gossen and Transition to the Problem of Marginal Utilitytheoretical
38
Disposition Combinations and the Need for Systematic Partial Decisionstheoretical
39
Exact Solvability of Partial Problems and Practical Economic Formulaetheoretical
40
Partial Utility Orders as an Unabridged Theoretical Proceduretheoretical
41
Why Marginal Utility Must Be Sought in Abbreviated Calculationtheoretical
42
General Problem Statement of Marginal Utilitytheoretical
43
Relation Between Marginal Utility and Partial Utility Orderstheoretical
44
Partial Utility Orders as Unconscious Premises and Final Characterization of Theoretical Calculationtheoretical
45
Why the Work Is Framed as a Theory of Economic Calculationtheoretical
46
The Framework of Subjective Concrete Goods Utilitytheoretical
47
First and Third Dogmatic Elements of Marginal Utility Theorytheoretical
48
Dependent Utility, Austrian Theory, and the Principle of Economic Relevancetheoretical
49
Legend for Figure 1: Uses, Quantities, and Disposition Combinationstheoretical