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Ten great economists
1952
by
Schumpeter
Alfred Marshall
Economic History
John Maynard Keynes
Joseph Schumpeter
Karl Marx
Leon Walras
Vilfredo Pareto
Carl Menger
Eugen von Bohm-Bawerk
Irving Fisher
Austrian School
Gustav Schmoller
Institutionalism
Max Weber
Utilitarianism
Francis Ysidro Edgeworth
Labor Theory of Value
Mathematical Economics
Methodology
Equilibrium
Lionel Robbins
Supply and Demand
David Ricardo
Geopolitics
Marginal Utility
Methodenstreit
William Stanley Jevons
Monopolistic Competition
Price Theory
Capital Theory
Interest Theory
Business Cycles
James Tobin
Milton Friedman
Monetarism
Monetary Theory
Paul Samuelson
Quantity Theory of Money
Alvin Hansen
Thorstein Veblen
International Monetary Fund
Keynesian Economics
Marshall Plan
Lausanne School
Expectations
Marxism
Friedrich von Wieser
Capitalism
Class Struggle
Positivism
Socialism
Dialectical Materialism
Division of Labor
Factors of Production
Feudalism
Friedrich Engels
Proletariat
Classical Economics
John Stuart Mill
Johann Karl Rodbertus
Jean Charles Léonard de Sismondi
Exchange Value
Perfect Competition
Fixed Capital
Ground Rent
Raw Materials
Exploitation
Ferdinand Lassalle
Surplus Value
Thomas Malthus
Wages
Capital Accumulation
Competition
Creative Destruction
Entrepreneurship
Innovation
Nassau Senior
Stationary Economy
Economies of Scale
Market Structure
Monopoly
Oligopoly
Unemployment
Economic Crisis
Overproduction
Rudolf Hilferding
Say's Law
Underconsumption
Great Depression
Capital Movements
Imperialism
Karl Kautsky
Otto Bauer
Protectionism
Rosa Luxemburg
Antoine Augustin Cournot
Bimetallism
Hermann Heinrich Gossen
Price Formation
Subjective Value
Johann Heinrich von Thunen
Externalities
Arthur Cecil Pigou
Joan Robinson
Welfare Economics
Laissez-faire
Liberalism
Economic Policy
League of Nations
Benito Mussolini
Totalitarianism
Treaty of Versailles
Monetary Reform
Demography
Income Distribution
Economic Calculation
Marginal Cost
Jeremy Bentham
Productivity
Historical School
Zurechnung
Roundabout Production
Subsistence Fund
Complementary Goods
Profit and Loss
Discount Rate
Time Preference
Interest Rates
Economic Goods
Knut Wicksell
Adolf Wagner
International Trade
Free Trade
Price Controls
Trade Policy
Woodrow Wilson
World War I
Ragnar Frisch
Utility
Neoclassical Economics
Ideology
Acceleration Principle
Bureaucracy
Gold Standard
Investment
Reparations
Friedrich A. Hayek
Gunnar Myrdal
Liquidity
Natural Rate of Interest
Multiplier
Bretton Woods
Physiocracy
Karl Bucher
Lujo Brentano
Sozialpolitik
Ludwig von Mises
Opportunity Cost
Valuation
Velocity of Circulation
Table of Contents · 78 segments
1
Front Matter, Publication Details, and Contents
chapter
2
Introduction to the 1997 Edition: Ideas and Biographies
essay
3
The Collection’s Place in the History of Economic Thought: Survival Quality
essay
4
Comments on the Selection of Economists
essay
5
Schumpeter’s Methodological Judgment and the Critical Discussion of Marx
essay
6
Marie Esprit Léon Walras
essay
7
Carl Menger
essay
8
Alfred Marshall
essay
9
Vilfredo Pareto and Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk
essay
10
Frank William Taussig and Irving Fisher
essay
11
Wesley Clair Mitchell
essay
12
Wesley Clair Mitchell: method, obituaries, and Schumpeter’s assessment
essay
13
John Maynard Keynes in Schumpeter’s obituary essay
essay
14
Assessments of Ten Great Economists in contemporary reviews
essay
15
Schumpeter and the persistence of schools of economic thought
essay
16
References for the introductory essay
bibliography
17
Foreword by Elizabeth Boody Schumpeter
essay
18
Karl Marx: The Marxian Doctrine and Marx the Prophet
chapter
19
Karl Marx: Marx the Sociologist
chapter
20
Marx the Economist: Scholarship, Method, and Ricardian Foundations
theoretical
21
Marx’s Ricardian Labor Theory of Value and Its Limits
theoretical
22
Rent, Produced Capital, and the Ricardian Problem Marx Inherited
theoretical
23
Labor Power, Surplus Value, and the Theory of Exploitation
theoretical
24
Surplus Value, Profit Equalization, Falling Profit, and the Premise of Accumulation
theoretical
25
Compulsion to Accumulate, Capitalist Change, and Temporary Surplus Gains
theoretical
26
Concentration of Capital, Scale, and the Rise of Big Business
theoretical
27
Immiserization, Machinery, and the Industrial Reserve Army
theoretical
28
Business Cycles, Breakdown Theory, and Marx’s Methodological Achievement
theoretical
29
Marx the Teacher: The Marxian Synthesis and Its Limits
chapter
30
Marxian Imperialism, Protectionism, and the State
theoretical
31
Scientific Socialism, Breakdown, and Revolution
theoretical
32
Marie Esprit Leon Walras
essay
33
Carl Menger
essay
34
Alfred Marshall’s Principles: Obsolescence and Enduring Influence
essay
35
Alfred Marshall’s Principles: Historical Setting and Analytical Core
essay
36
Alfred Marshall’s Principles: Distinctive Analytical Tools
essay
37
Alfred Marshall’s Principles: Public Garb and Victorian Appeal
essay
38
Alfred Marshall’s Principles: Continuing Influence and Econometrics
essay
39
Vilfredo Pareto: Opening Appraisal and Plan
essay
40
Pareto’s biography, training, and early economic formation
essay
41
Patrician isolation, classical scholarship, and anti-parliamentary liberalism
essay
42
Anti-democratic currents and Pareto’s stance toward Fascism
essay
43
Pareto’s school and his divergence from Walras
theoretical
44
Pareto’s law of income distribution and the path to the Manuel
theoretical
45
Generalization of Walras, static theory, socialist calculation, and dynamics
theoretical
46
Pareto as patron of New Welfare Economics and production theory
theoretical
47
Vilfredo Pareto: The Sociologist
essay
48
Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk: Memorial Introduction and Public Career
essay
49
Böhm-Bawerk I: Scientific Lifework and Intellectual Setting
essay
50
Böhm-Bawerk II: Value, Capital, Interest, and Marx
theoretical
51
Böhm-Bawerk III–IV: Style, Method, and Scientific Restraint
essay
52
Böhm-Bawerk V: Capital, Roundabout Production, and Capitalism
theoretical
53
Böhm-Bawerk VI: Value, Price, Imputation, and Distribution
theoretical
54
Böhm-Bawerk VII: Agio Theory and the Three Reasons for Interest
theoretical
55
Böhm-Bawerk VII: The Interest Market and the Subsistence Fund
theoretical
56
Böhm-Bawerk VII: Interest, Socialism, Capitalization, and Final Appraisal
theoretical
57
Frank William Taussig: Early Years and Historical Orientation
essay
58
Taussig II: Ascent Through Tariff Scholarship and Legal Training
essay
59
Taussig II: Harvard Teaching, Family, and Professional Establishment
essay
60
Taussig III: Autumn of Life, Principles, and Public Service
essay
61
Taussig IV: Editorial Leadership and the Art of Teaching
essay
62
Irving Fisher’s Econometrics: Program, General Equilibrium, and Utility
theoretical
63
Taussig IV: Later Research, Retirement, and Death
essay
64
Irving Fisher: Capital, Income, and the Theory of Interest
theoretical
65
Irving Fisher: Money, Cycles, Monetary Reform, and Legacy
theoretical
66
Wesley Clair Mitchell: Character, Formation, and Institutionalism
essay
67
Wesley Clair Mitchell II: Policy, Ideology, and Theory
essay
68
Wesley Clair Mitchell III: Greenbacks, Business Cycles, and the Money Economy
essay
69
Wesley Mitchell: National Bureau Business-Cycle Method and Scholarly Legacy
essay
70
John Maynard Keynes, I: Family, Education, and Analytic Temperament
essay
71
John Maynard Keynes, II: Public Service, Cambridge, Editorship, and Indian Currency
essay
72
John Maynard Keynes, III: Versailles, Economic Consequences, and the Stagnation Vision
essay
73
John Maynard Keynes, IV–V: Probability, Personal Character, Monetary Reform, and the Treatise on Money
essay
74
John Maynard Keynes, VI–VII: From the Treatise to the General Theory and Its Analytic Structure
essay
75
John Maynard Keynes, VIII: Keynesianism, Ideology, and Final Public Service
essay
76
Appendix: G. F. Knapp
essay
77
Appendix: Friedrich von Wieser
essay
78
Appendix: Ladislaus von Bortkiewicz
essay