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Teleologische Theorie der Staatswirtschaft

1933

by Englis

Public FinanceEpistemologyMethodologyCausalityHans KelsenImmanuel KantRationalityTeleologyTaxationUtilityValuationMarginal CostEconomic GoodsMarginal UtilityValue JudgmentsHuman ActionOthmar SpannCarl MengerEconomic HistoryGround RentMethodenstreitMonetary TheoryPrice TheorySubjective ValueAustrian SchoolHermann Heinrich GossenProperty RightsCooperativesProfit and LossFactors of ProductionNationalizationSocialismCommunismIndividualismLaissez-faireProductivityBureaucracyWelfare StateJeremy BenthamUse ValuePrice MechanismProgressive TaxationInsuranceMonopolyPublic GoodsFederalismAdolf WagnerAlbert SchaffleEmil SaxHistorical SchoolCapitalismFiscal PolicyKnut WicksellExchange ValueObjective ValueSocial Policy

Table of Contents · 62 segments

1
Title Pages and Publication Datachapter
2
Prefaceessay
3
Table of Contents and Dedicationchapter
4
First Part, Introduction: Teleological Thought as the Basis of Economic Theorytheoretical
5
The Nature and Meaning of Teleologytheoretical
6
Formal Teleology: Complexes of Postulatestheoretical
7
Complementary Teleological Concepts: Needtheoretical
8
Complementary Teleological Concepts: Usefulness, Harm, and Teleological Qualitytheoretical
9
Teleological Valuation and Valuetheoretical
10
Return, Cost, and the Error of Treating Forgone Utility as Damagetheoretical
11
Scarcity of Means and the Teleological Nature of Procurement Coststheoretical
12
Teleological Thinking under a Maximal Purposetheoretical
13
Scientific Application of Teleology: Theoretical and Practical Sciencestheoretical
14
Teleological Theorytheoretical
15
Practical Sciencestheoretical
16
System of Human Purposestheoretical
17
Epistemological Foundation of Economics: Introductionchapter
18
Economic Theory Is Not Causal: Economic Theory and Economic Historytheoretical
19
Economic Theory Is Not Normative: Economy and Lawtheoretical
20
Economic Theory Is Teleological: Economy and Technologytheoretical
21
Form and Content of the Economy: Introductiontheoretical
22
The Form and Content of the Economytheoretical
23
Outline of a Theory of the Individual Economy: Introductiontheoretical
24
The Purpose of the Individual Economy and Opening of Its Constitutiontheoretical
25
The Constitution of the Individual Economy: Correlative Concepts and Teleological Explanationtheoretical
26
Organization of Individualistic Means Procurementtheoretical
27
Economic Systems and Economic Order: The Individualistic Systemtheoretical
28
Economic Systems and Economic Order: The Solidaristic Systemtheoretical
29
Economic Systems and Economic Order: The Cooperative Systemtheoretical
30
Economic Systems and Property Regimestheoretical
31
Valuation of Individualistic, Solidaristic, and Cooperative Systemstheoretical
32
Final Overview of Economic-System Elements: Individualistic and Cooperative Systemstheoretical
33
Solidaristic Economic System and Mixed Economic Orderstheoretical
34
Legal Order and State Economy as State Policytheoretical
35
Form and Content of State Economy in the Narrow Sensetheoretical
36
The Purpose of State Economytheoretical
37
Utility and Harm in State Economytheoretical
38
General Solidaristic Constitution of State Economytheoretical
39
Limits of Rationality and the Existence Minimumtheoretical
40
Use of Means in State Economytheoretical
41
Tax Theory I: Means Procurement and Tax Capacitytheoretical
42
Tax Theory II: Progression, Parity, Proportionality, and the Existence Minimumtheoretical
43
Tax Theory III: Individualistic Production Constraints and Material Tax Capacitytheoretical
44
Individualistic Elements and State Enterprisestheoretical
45
Cooperative Elements and Feestheoretical
46
Decentralization of State Economy and Self-Governmenttheoretical
47
Tasks of the Science of State Economy and Transition to Ritschltheoretical
48
Ritschl’s Introduction: Competing Tasks and Schools of Public Financetheoretical
49
Foundations of State Economy: Individual Starting Point and Objective Need Theorytheoretical
50
Collective Needs, Community Spirit, and Tax Dutytheoretical
51
Economic Character of State Economytheoretical
52
Essence and Purpose of Taxationtheoretical
53
Normative Theory of Taxation: Hypothetical Ought and Economic Allocationtheoretical
54
Extent of Taxation and Proportional Coverage of Needstheoretical
55
Distribution of the Tax Burden and Progressive Taxationtheoretical
56
Critique of Ritschl: Objective and Subjective Needtheoretical
57
Critique of Ritschl: Goods, Value, and the Principle of Economic Efficiencytheoretical
58
Critique of Ritschl: Collective and Aggregate Needstheoretical
59
Critique of Ritschl: The Economic Character of State Economytheoretical
60
Critique of Ritschl: The Extent of Taxationtheoretical
61
Critique of Ritschl: Distribution of the Tax Burdentheoretical
62
Conclusion: Ritschl’s Sociological Construction and Engliš’s Teleological Theorytheoretical