1,549 works, 150 years of economic thought. Each one summarized and searchable, with cited passages inside.
This file is a single theoretical essay by Ludwig M. Lachmann, originally written for a volume honoring Ludwig von Mises. Its scope is both critical and reconstructive: Lachmann presents Mises as the Austrian economist w...
Macro-economic Thinking and the Market Economy — Summary Lachmann’s Hobart Paper is a methodological critique of macroeconomics when it treats aggregates as self-explanatory magnitudes rather than as outcomes of plans, e...
Sir John Hicks as a Neo-Austrian — Summary Lachmann’s 1973 article reviews John Hicks’s Capital and Time: A Neo-Austrian Theory as both a further stage in Hicks’s work on capital and a contribution to the contemporary cr...
Lachmann’s essay is a compact intervention in a disciplinary crisis rather than a historical survey of Austrian economics...
This article, reprinted from Economica and arranged in six sections with notes, is a compact statement of Lachmann’s plan-theoretic capital theory...
This file is a single-author inaugural lecture, first delivered in 1950 and reprinted in 1977. Lachmann’s argument is explicitly tripartite: economics is a science, a social science, and an analytical social science...
Lachmann’s essay is a compact retrospective survey of economic thought from 1933 to 1953, written as intellectual history rather than as doctrinal inventory...
Ludwig M. Lachmann, “The Salvage of Ideas” Lachmann’s essay is an intellectual history of Austrian economics after its mid-century eclipse and a methodological argument for how such a tradition can be revived...