THE FAILURE OF THE NEW SUBJECTIVIST REVOLUTION
Brief Contents
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: The Market Economy
Chapter 3: The Concept of Function, the Limited-Action Economies and Saving
Chapter 4: Entrepreneurship
Chapter 5: Profit and Loss
Chapter 6: The Market Process and Competition
Chapter 7: Rights, External Costs and External Benefits
Chapter 8: The Tendency Toward Equilibrium
Appendix: Anticipations, Experimentation and Equilibrium
Detailed Contents
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
1. The Goal of Economics and Method of the New Subjectivism
a. The Methods of Dealing With Complexity
b. The Method of Contrasting Images of Functions
(1) The Evenly Rotating Economy
(2) Defining Entrepreneurship
(3) Entrepreneurial Economies
(4) Profit and Other Income
(5) The Market Economy
c. Economic Teleology
(1) Microeconomic View
2. Cognitive Faculties and the Principles of Subjectivism
a. Cognitive Faculties
(1) The Fundamental Meaning of the New Subjectivism
(2) The Growth and Development of Cognitive Faculties
(3) Uncertainty About Cognitive Faculties
(4) Cognitive Faculties and the Elucidation of Entrepreneurship
b. The Principles of Subjectivism
(1) Subjective Interpretation
(2) Adequacy
(3) Relevance
3. Why the New Subjectivism Has Failed
4. Rationale and Plan of the Book
Chapter 2: The Market Economy
1. The Market Economy as an Imaginary Construction: The Theoretical Image
2. Other Uses of the Words "Market" and Market Economy"
a. Real vs. Imaginary Market Economy
b. The Market, Market Economy, Market System, Market Process, and State of the Market
c. The "Living and Operating" Market Economy
d. Conflict
e. The Market Economy as an Historical Image
f. A Note on the Use of the Term "Pure"
Chapter 3: The Concept of Function, the Limited-Action Economies and Saving
1. The Concept of an Economic Function
a. Mises's Identification of the Economic Functions
b. The Entrepreneur as a Functional Class
c. Why Entrepreneurship Should Be Separated from the Other Economic Functions
2. Mises's Limited-action Economies
a. The Stationary Economy
b. The Progressing and Retrogressing Economies
(1) Saving and Progress
c. Assessment
(1) Violation of Subjectivist Principles Wealth, Income and the Principle of Subjective Interpretation
(2) Wealth, Income and the Principle of Relevance
(3) The Assumption of Specialization
(4) The Concepts of Progress and Economic Development
(5) On Representing the Effects of Economic Change
(6) The Functional Roles and Economic Gains
Chapter 4: Entrepreneurship
1. Mises's Two Definitions of the Entrepreneur
a. Assessment
(1) Promoting Entrepreneurs and Differences in Wants
(2) Promoting Entrepreneurs and Differences in Abilities
(3) Promoting Entrepreneurs in the Progressing Economy
b. Conclusion
Chapter 5: Profit and Loss
1. Profit and the Belief That One's Appraisals Are Superior
a. The Two Meanings of the Subjectivity of Profit
(1) The Subjectivity of the Satisfaction Due to a Given Sum of Money Profit
(2) The Subjectivity of Appraisals and Perceptions of Profit
b. The Idea of Pure Entrepreneurial Profit
c. Profit in the Market Economy
2. Errors Due to the Non-Subjectivist Definition of Profit
a. Entrepreneurship's Contribution to Welfare
b. Anticipations, Differences in Appraisals and Zero Profit
c. Mises's Statements About Conditions Under Which Profit Would Disappear
Chapter 6: The Market Process and Competition
1. The Market Process
a. Mises's Definition of the Market Process
(1) Purpose for Using the Term
b. Assessment
c. Mises vs. the Market Process
2. Competition
a. A New Subjectivist View of Competition in the Market Economy
(1) Copying
(2) Innovation
(3) Competition for Appraisement Ability
b. Collusive Monopoly
c. Some Observations on the Effects of Competition
d. A Critique of Mises's Concept of Competition in the Market Economy
(1) Does Competition Have a Social Function?
(2) Entrepreneurship and the Creation of Markets and Prices
(3) The Selective Process
3. A Brief Comment on Modern Market Process Analysis
Chapter 7: Rights, External Costs and External Benefits
1. Mises on Private Property Rights and Externalities
a. The Significance of Property Rights in the Market Economy
b. External Costs
(1) Perspective
c. External Benefit
(1) External Economies of Intellectual Creation
d. Private Property Rights and the Scope of Economics
2. Why the Absence of Property Rights in Some Goods and Factors Should Be Part of Economic Theory
a. Intersubjective Uncertainty as a Necessary Characteristic of Economic Interaction
b. Absence of Private Property Rights
c. The Entrepreneurial Role
d. Enforcement Costs
e. A Word on Terminology
f. Conclusion
3. An Image of the Market Economy in Which Private Property Rights Do Not Exist in All Goods and Factors
a. Sovereignty in a Barter Situation
b. Sovereignty in the Pure Entrepreneurial Economy
c. Consumer Sovereignty and External Effects
(1) The Case of External Benefits
(2) Sunk Cost and the Option to Sell
(3) Property Rights as a Source of Monopoly Power
(4) External Benefits of Market Pricing
(5) Collective Good
(6) The Case of External Costs
4. Inventors, Authors, and Entrepreneurship
5. Conclusion
Chapter 8: The Tendency Toward Equilibrium
1. Equilibrium in Individual Action
a. Teleology
b. Method of Contrast
c. A Tendency Toward Equilibrium?
(1) Learning Is Simultaneous with Changes in the Data
(2) Learning Causes a Change in the Data
2. Equilibrium in Relation to Economic Interaction
a. A Single Pure Entrepreneurial Action
(1) Equilibrium as an Endpoint
b. Entrepreneurial Interaction
(1) Competition
(2) Complements, Substitutes, Collusive Monopoly, and Teams
(3) To Be or Not to Be an Entrepreneur
c. The Endpoint of Pure Entrepreneurial Interaction
d. A Tendency Toward Equilibrium?
(1) Learning, the Data, and the Pure Entrepreneurial Economy
(2) Specialization of Knowledge
(3) Interaction of Wills
3. Conclusion
Appendix
Anticipations, Experimentation and Equilibrium
References
Subject Index
Name Index