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Home arrow eBook Categories arrow Economics arrow Study Guide to Man, Economy, and State with Power and Market

Study Guide to Man, Economy, and State with Power and Market

Ebook - Economics
Thursday, 07 February 2008

Study Guide to Man, Economy, and State with Power and Market, Asiaing.comRobert Murphy’s Study Guide to Man, Economy, and State with Power and Market makes Rothbard’s great treatise accessible not only to students but to anyone who wants to learn economics from the ground up. It is supremely well organized, with chapter summaries, notes on unique contributions, technical explanations, and study questions. It is intended for personal study or for use by a reading group.

Murray Rothbard’s treatise Man, Economy, and State carried the Austrian School of economics forward from the postwar period to modern times. It was this text that served as the bridge between the work of Mises and the generation that is now working to advance and apply its theoretical apparatus to current problems.

Man Economy and State - Study Guide  Description:

The prose of Man, Economy, and State by Murray Rothbard is as clear as a bell. But its sheer size (1441 pages!) is intimidating. After all, Rothbard systematically covers the whole of economic science.

The young and brilliant economist Robert Murphy has come to the rescue!

In writing the Study Guide to Man, Economy, and State, he had his students in mind. He wanted to design a great teaching tool, one that would reach students the same way a private tutor would. He wanted to help Rothbard's magnum opus have permanent impact on their thinking.

He accomplished his goal! The guide provides a roadmap to this massive book, complete with summaries, technical notes, annotations of key contributions, and study questions. He puts it all into a manageable size, with 12 pages per chapter of the Scholar's Edition (which includes both Man, Economy, and State and Power and Market).

To write a guide of this sort is harder than it looks. Murphy first had to master the material in every way, enough so that he could write short, 3-page summaries of the chapters.

He then used his advanced training to discuss and elaborate some of the more technically difficult sections of the book. And because Rothbard does not often explain what is innovative in his own theories, Murphy draws attention to the unique contributions to economic science found herein. He tops if off with a series of thought-provoking questions that deal with the core lessons of each chapter.

The study guide comes spiral bound for ease of use. It also comes with a CD in the back cover that provides a complete edition of the book and guide. That way you can carry the guide with you on trips and study economics on your laptop, even without an internet connection.

Murphy spent more than a year writing and editing it. As you will see, he is an excellent teacher and he set out to do this in a way that appeals to students of all ages.

One of the goals of the Mises Institute has long been to make this book accessible to everyone, particularly people who are studying economics, and especially those who are interested in Austrian economics. This powerful guide makes the text open up as never before.

It is ideal for classroom use, and also for private study. Another use didn't occur to the author until after he finished it: he uses it to prepare lectures for class! He says now that he doesn't know how he taught without it before.

Murphy sought to write a teaching guide but he ended up writing a manual to Man, Economy, and State that will quickly become a staple of the literature. Would that every book of this size had such a guide (and, yes, he is working on one for Human Action too!), and would that every guide were as clear and useful as this one.

Professor Murphy is an extraordinary talent with a great gift for helping students understand economics. Now he can be your teacher too.

Download Study Guide to Man, Economy, and State with Power and Market

PDF format, 717KB, 268Pages, provided by Mises.org.

STUDY GUIDE TO MAN, ECONOMY, AND STATE
A TREATISE ON ECONOMIC PRINCIPLES
WITH POWER AND MARKET
GOVERNMENT AND THE ECONOMY
SCHOLAR’S EDITION, MURRAY N. ROTHBARD
Copyright 2006 by Ludwig von Mises Institute

Introduction:

In June of 2004, I became convinced of the need for a study guide to accompany what is arguably the single most important book for the student of Austrian economics and libertarian policy analysis. Murray Rothbard’s Man, Economy, and State is simply the most comprehensive exposition of Austrian economics that exists. Although Mises’s Human Action is itself a self-contained, beautiful work of sheer brilliance, it is nonetheless the case that, in his subsequent work, Rothbard teaches economics more clearly. Power and Market builds on the analysis of Man, Economy, and State to provide an exhaustive classification and critique of government intervention in all of its various forms.

Originally intended as a single volume, Man, Economy, and State and Power and Market were published separately due to (alleged) space constraints and, no doubt, the radical positions contained in the latter. The Mises Institute’s lovely Scholar’s Edition has reunited these two works as Rothbard meant them to be. However, I shall omit further discussion of the publication background (inasmuch as a historical sketch is provided in Joseph Stromberg’s Introduction to the scholar’s edition) and explain the format of this study guide.

The chapters of this guide match the twelve of Man, Economy, and State and the seven of Power and Market; appendices are handled within each chapter. A typical chapter1 begins with a one-page summary. This is then followed by a detailed outline of the chapter, which follows Rothbard’s format (Arabic numerals, then English letters, etc.) for sections and subsections. (The length of Rothbard’s chapter consequently influences the length of the detailed outline in the study guide.)

Following the detailed outline are the “contributions” of the chapter. Sometimes these observations refer to techniques or doctrines that are unique to the Austrian School, while at other times they refer to innovations engineered by Rothbard himself. (This distinction is always made clear.) The next section contains the technical details, intended for advanced readers (in particular graduate students). Generally, in this section I contrasted Rothbard’s approach with mainstream economics, but I also (especially for chapters from Power and Market) would sometimes consider objections that Rothbard had not, or would simply take a given discussion a little further than he had done in the text.

Finally, each chapter of the study guide contains ten questions. Some of the questions merely test reading comprehension; they ensure that the conscientious (but perhaps intimidated and/or overwhelmed) reader is absorbing the important points. However, especially to challenge the more advanced readers, some of the questions take an advocatus diaboli approach and point to ostensible contradictions or problems with Rothbard’s analysis. (Whether the reader can resolve the alleged flaws or not, he or she will undoubtedly understand Rothbard’s case much more after considering these questions.) Where appropriate, I have included the relevant page numbers (from the scholar’s edition) after each question to save the reader time.

I strongly urge all those who take Austrian economics seriously to read (at least large portions of) Rothbard’s treatise; I would go so far as to say that a modern academic cannot really call him or herself an Austrian economist without doing so. For those who may be intimidated or discouraged by the massive volume, I hope that this study guide will at least “chart the territory” and allow them to begin in those topics that most interest them. At that point, I suspect, Rothbard’s spell will overtake them and they will be compelled to read all 1,441 pages.

Let me end this brief introduction by urging even older experts to reread this important book. I myself had read Man,
Economy, and State cover to cover in college, and yet I was amazed at how much better it had grown over the years! In addition, I hope that this study guide may provide a useful reference for such experts. (I myself have used it to refresh my memory on a particularly subtle aspect of Rothbard’s approach to capital and growth.)

Enough now with the introduction. . . . The reader must open the treatise and let the learning begin!

ROBERT P. MURPHY
January 2006

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