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A History of Marginal Utility Theory
2016
by
Emil Kauder
Austrian School
Economic History
Marginal Cost
Marginal Utility
Price Theory
Zurechnung
Carl Menger
Hermann Heinrich Gossen
Indifference Curves
John von Neumann
Leon Walras
Methodology
Oskar Morgenstern
William Stanley Jevons
Adam Smith
Alfred Marshall
John Locke
Labor Theory of Value
Utilitarianism
Aristotle
Effective Demand
Scarcity
Utility
Classical Economics
Subjective Value
Consumer Sovereignty
Jeremy Bentham
Capitalism
Mathematical Economics
David Ricardo
Friedrich von Wieser
Historical School
John Stuart Mill
Nassau Senior
Karl Marx
Knut Wicksell
Laissez-faire
Lausanne School
Exchange Value
Hans Mayer
Equilibrium
Eugen von Bohm-Bawerk
Antoine Augustin Cournot
Ludwig von Mises
John Hicks
Max Weber
Rationality
Vilfredo Pareto
John Bates Clark
Murray Rothbard
Arthur Cecil Pigou
Progressive Taxation
Francis Ysidro Edgeworth
Irving Fisher
Edmund Husserl
Opportunity Cost
Productivity
Game Theory
Income Distribution
Monopoly
Oskar Lange
Ragnar Frisch
Welfare Economics
Uncertainty
Insurance
John Kenneth Galbraith
Keynesian Economics
Macroeconomics
Methodological Individualism
Table of Contents · 33 segments
1
Front Matter, Acknowledgments, and Contents
essay
2
Introduction: Object and Method; Historical Landmarks
theoretical
3
Part I and Chapter I: The Philosophical Background
chapter
4
Chapter II: Value-in-Use: The Forerunner of the Marginal Utility Theory
chapter
5
Value-in-Use: Galiani, Turgot, and the Decline of the Utility Discussion
chapter
6
The Early Marginalists before Gossen
chapter
7
Gossen’s Synthesis
chapter
8
Part II Divider and OCR Artifacts
chapter
9
The Rise of Marginalism
chapter
10
Appendix to Chapter V: The Marxian Interpretation of Marginal Utility Theory
essay
11
The Achievements: Menger, Jevons, and Walras Compared
chapter
12
The Achievements: Jevons, Walras, and Menger on Marginal Utility and Value
theoretical
13
The Household Planning
theoretical
14
The Equalization of Utilities and Imputation
theoretical
15
Chapter VII: Literary Sources and New Ideas
chapter
16
Chapter VIII: Differences in Philosophy and Method
chapter
17
Part III Opening and OCR Artifact
chapter
18
Chapter IX: The Dominant Position of the Austrian School
chapter
19
Chapter X: Rationality and Marginal Utility
chapter
20
Chapter XI: The Meaning of Utility
chapter
21
Chapter XII: The Law of Diminishing Utility
chapter
22
Chapter XIII: Diminishing Utility and Marginal Substitution
chapter
23
Chapter XIV: Total and Marginal Value
chapter
24
Chapter XV: Household Planning
chapter
25
Chapter XVI: Costs and Marginal Utility
chapter
26
Chapter XVII: Imputation-I — Menger, Boehm-Bawerk, and Hans Mayer
chapter
27
Chapter XVIII: Imputation-II — Wieser, von Neumann, and Morgenstern
chapter
28
Chapter XIX: The Measuring of Utility — Development Until 1934
chapter
29
Chapters XX-XXI: Uncertainty, Measuring, and the Contemporary Situation
chapter
30
Chapter XXII: The Chance of Survival
chapter
31
Sources and Literature
bibliography
32
Author Index
bibliography
33
Subject Matter Index
bibliography