Karlheinz Muhr Library
Catalog
Timeline
Toggle theme
Ask the Librarian
Open menu
Catalog
Home
Catalog
Wirtschaftsformen und Wirtschaftsprinzipien
1888
by
Gross
Knowledge Economics
Capitalism
Nationalization
Adolf Wagner
Albert Schaffle
Methodology
Political Economy
Emil Sax
Public Finance
Socialism
Public Goods
Valuation
Slavery
Friedrich Engels
Division of Labor
Guilds
Karl Marx
Cartels
Trade Unions
Bureaucracy
Insurance
Banking
Poverty
Economic History
Price Formation
Use Value
Carl Menger
Competition
Innovation
Monopoly
Protectionism
Usury
Coercion
Taxation
Cooperatives
Education
Infrastructure
Inheritance
Social Policy
Table of Contents · 25 segments
1
Google Books public-domain notice and usage guidelines
essay
2
Title pages and publication metadata
essay
3
Preface
essay
4
Table of contents: Economic forms and economic principles
essay
5
Continuation of table of contents for Part II
essay
6
Introduction: Economics as an Organic Social Science
essay
7
Part I, Chapter I: Concept of the Economic Subject
chapter
8
Chapter II: The Individual Economy
chapter
9
Chapter III: The Family Economy
chapter
10
Chapter IV, §1: Collective Economy — General Theory and Historical Development
theoretical
11
Chapter IV, §2: Voluntary Collective Economies
theoretical
12
Chapter IV, §3: Compulsory Collective Economies
theoretical
13
Chapter V: The Subjectless Economy
chapter
14
Part II, Chapter I: The Concept of the Economic Principle
chapter
15
Chapter II: The Own-Economy Principle
chapter
16
Chapter III: The Private-Economy Principle
chapter
17
The Common-Economic Principle: Coerced Valuation Between Collective Economy and Members
theoretical
18
Suppression of Individual Valuation and the Scope of Common-Economic Traffic
theoretical
19
Free Collective Economies: Corporations, Cooperatives, Cartels, and Closed Communities
theoretical
20
Coercive Collective Economies and the Historical Expansion of Public Functions
theoretical
21
Absolute Limits of the Common-Economic Principle in Production
theoretical
22
Distribution, Labor Valuation, and the Impossibility of Common-Economic Control of Intellectual Work
theoretical
23
Relative Limits: Family, Inheritance, Self-Responsibility, and the Dangers of Excessive Common Economy
theoretical
24
Chapter V: The Charitable Principle
chapter
25
Concluding Remarks on Economic Forms and Principles
essay