The
First and Next 25 Years
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
This talk
was delivered on the 25th anniversary of the founding
of the Mises Institute, October
13, 2007, in New York City.
There are only
two times when the press is interested in the opinions of economists:
when the economy crashes, or when there is a presidential election.
And sadly, most of their opinions amount to pretending omniscience
or shilling for government power.
It seems remarkable
that in the 18th and 19th centuries, to be
an economist meant, above all, to be a pain in the neck to the powers
that be. An economist was a person who warned that government cannot
improve society, and that the attempt to do so only creates more
problems.
That is the
sort of economist Mises was, and that is the sort of economist that
the Mises Institute set out to cultivate 25 years ago, with the
success we see today. But the Mises Institute has become much more
than that.
The Mises Institute
has accomplished not only what it set out to do; that is, to be
a support for Mises's ideas. It has sparked a revolution in learning,
and is leading the way to a future of liberty.
All those who
have played a part deserve our gratitude, our benefactors, scholars,
students, and readers the world over.
Ironically,
as I learned from Guido Hülsmann, it was Mises himself who had dreamed
about what has happened in the last 25 years. Nearing the end of
his life, he urged in a memo the establishment of a center for the
study and promotion of liberty, with economics at its core. He must
have spoken to Margit von Mises about this. Certainly she was enthusiastic
when I approached her with the idea of the Mises Institute, here
in New York City.
Her husband’s
memo was the fruit of decades of frustration with the growing role
of the state in education, and the complicity of the universities
in the corruption of education toward statist ends. A new institution
to teach and advance the ideas of liberty was his answer, to make
an end-run around official propaganda.
Note that this
institution was not to be a think tank, in the traditional sense
of that term. Think tanks are a product of the age of the political
party, a holding tank for politicians out of office and a repository
for schemes to secure power for partisans. In this model, which
originated in Germany and was perfected in Britain, the think tank
was a private ally of the state, prepared to cheer on the leaders,
or be the loyal opposition, whichever is called for at the moment.
This was not
what Mises had in mind. He wanted an intellectually activist institution
that would be devoted to teaching, researching, publishing, preserving
and advancing ideas, and, above all, doing what he believed had
to be done: convincing the masses of people of the merits of a fully
free society.
Why do we need
institutions to advance and support particular ideas? If an idea
is good, why should it need an apparatus behind it?
With the advent
and advance of the modern state, the freedom to think came under
ever more fire. Then the state took over education itself.
After World
War I, for example, Mises warned that government schools in multilingual
territories pose an intractable cultural problem. Few issues drive
people to extremes like the attempt to impose on them a foreign
language. This creates conflicts that the state cannot solve. If
it teaches in one language, it irritates the people who speak another.
The dominant language will become a symbol of dominant political
power, which further antagonizes the minority. There is really only
one solution to this problem, said Mises: education must be private,
if only to preserve peace among groups.
But of course
Mises's point can be extended to all issues that concern the human
intellect. The party in power is in a position to control the debate,
to punish those who refuse to accept the party line, to indoctrinate
the young, to whip up a fever on behalf of the regime's projects,
and to hire and fire intellectuals. In the case of Communism and
Nazism, it meant liquidating political enemies. In the case of democracy,
it means denying academic livelihoods, and demonizing those who
think differently.
In the United
States, our first real crisis occurred because the dominant power
wanted to crack down on free speech with the Alien and Sedition
Act. The result was the first nullification controversy that nearly
led to a breakup of the states, and would have had Jefferson not
been elected in 1800. But the lesson wasn't learned. People were
jailed during the Civil War and World War I for expressing points
of view the government didn't like, and this tradition has continued
to the present day.
The ideas of
liberty need room to breathe. They are almost always expressed in
opposition to the regime. The future is always uncertain, and liberty
is always fragile when the state is on the loose.
Recall that
Mises was never given a paid professorship at the University of
Vienna, and the reasons are detailed in the new biography by Guido
Hülsmann: his liberal politics barred him. But he nonetheless carved
out a niche for himself as a volunteer professor. His private seminar
in Vienna, which he taught while holding down a high-pressure job
at the Chamber of Commerce, wielded vast influence.
But when he
realized that growing National Socialist power meant that Vienna
was becoming dangerous for him, he was able to flee to Geneva, where
an institution in a neutral country cared for him, gave him space
and freedom to work, and protected him from the state. The result
was the German-language edition of Human
Action, a book that is a classic of the modern age. Then
the war meant he had to leave again, this time to America, where
sympathetic business owners and philanthropists supported him.
So there is
a very real sense in which Mises's own experiences underscore the
need for politically independent institutions that guard and preserve
the right to think creatively, particularly when that thought leads
in directions of which the regime disapproves.
In today’s
highly politicized society, independence from the state is ever
more important. That is precisely what the Mises Institute provides,
and on many levels: for faculty and students, and everyone interested
in Austrian economics, and the scholarship of libertarianism.
When the Mises
Institute was founded in 1982, Mises had been dead nine years. His
widow Margit was working hard to keep his books in print, and I
had assisted in this work as an editor at Arlington House Publishers,
with Theory and History, among other works. I met Mises only
once, but I recall every moment as if watching a film frame by frame.
When I approached
Margit, there was more interest in Austrian economics than at the
time of her husband’s death, but there was a deficiency that had
been noted by Murray Rothbard: Mises's own contributions were being
overlooked, even swept aside. He was treated as a worthy champion
of free enterprise, but his scientific work and his sweeping sociological
outlook were being neglected.
So the first
job of the Mises Institute was to provide a home for Mises's ideas,
for great books and also for his best and most productive students
– whether they were physically with us on location or not. The most
notable among them was, of course, Murray Rothbard, who agreed to
join the fledgling effort as academic vice president. The founding
of the Mises Institute lifted his spirits, and he gave the work
of the Mises Institute wings to fly.
Rothbard's
own scholarly career had followed a path that was eerily similar
to Mises's. He had all the credentials. He had written pioneering
works. He had made huge strides in pushing forward both economic
and political thought. And for this, he was repaid by academia with
a low-paid position at an academic backwater, though Rothbard never
complained. He had good students in New York, but none that he could
work with on a formal basis into graduate school.
These were
also difficult times for Rothbard politically. He was a brilliant
libertarian, which meant that he was neither a Reaganite nor a Carterite.
He had doubts about supply-side economics. He was not a backer of
war. In fact, he dissented from the war party that otherwise liked
some of his economic work. He favored both tax cuts and spending
cuts, which certainly made him an outlier, someone respected by
young students but shunned by mainstream venues.
He had done
well in developing a salon out of his living room. And he had achieved
some renown by publishing with non-establishment book houses. But
what he needed was some institutional backing that was not working
for a particular political party. The Institute gave Rothbard this
very thing. First there was our new edition of Mises's again-neglected
work Theory and History, to which Rothbard contributed the
introduction. Then there was a new journal for him to edit, which
became the basis of the Misesian revival in academia.
As
the Institute began to develop a base of financial support
and there is nothing I could say here, especially to the supporters
in this room, that could possibly exaggerate the central role of
this generosity there were ever more advances. Finally, there
came the classroom setting, and what later became known as the Mises
University.
How I well
recall the days when Murray headed the faculty. There he was rushing
from class to class, teaching with his legendary exuberance, talking
to all students between classes, and then staying up late at night,
surrounded by the hard core. He would teach until 2, 3 and even
4 o'clock in the morning. The students would arrive again the next
morning for classes at 8 o'clock. The staff was there with him too,
and by week's end, we all looked like death warmed over – except
Murray, of course, who was still going strong.
As I think
back to those days, several major events stand out. I recall looking
at Murray’s Review of Austrian Economics just after it came
off the press. I recall the faces of all the young students. And
I recall getting the news that a free-market champion had endowed
a chair of economics at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and
friends of the Institute wanted Murray to hold it. He would have
a well-paying job at a good school. He would have students that
he could cultivate. He would be secure and free to teach and write.
It was a remarkable thing. He would be spared the fate of Mises
and Hayek, who never held paid professorships in America. We were
surrounded by the evidence now: the work of the Institute could
make a difference.
Over the last
25 years, all these programs have blossomed beyond our wildest dreams.
We've had the great pleasure of working with remarkable scholars
like F.A. Hayek, Henry Hazlitt, Hans Sennholz, and so many more.
We’ve worked closely with the greatest statesman of our epoch: Ron
Paul, whose generosity was essential to our early success. We’ve
benefitted from the generosity of benefactors like the late Parthenia
de Muralt, O.P. Alford III, Lawrence Fertig, Henry Hazlitt, and
Margaret Rowley.
We’ve seen
so many new scholars appear and dazzle us with their writings, lectures,
and contributions. The Mises University has educated nearly every
Austrian working today, the world over. Our publications programs
expanded to films and audiobooks. Our library, rooted in the collections
of Murray Rothbard and Robert LeFevre, has extended in a thousand
directions with the goal of preserving what other libraries carelessly
or maliciously toss aside. We don't just keep these for our own
scholars and students. We have put hundreds of books online. Vast
amounts of amazing material, which hadn’t seen the light of day
for decades, is now a click away.
And if you
happen to be on a college campus and see some kids walking around
with t-shirts with images of Mises, Menger, Rothbard, or Bastiat,
you can know that the source is the Mises Institute.
We still have
a small staff, but we all work like crazy doing what we love: making
available the scholarship of liberty in the Misesian tradition,
and encouraging its study and advancement. We want to bring back
into print the whole of the Austrian and libertarian library. Just
this year, that includes the books of Hazlitt, Heilperin, Chodorov,
Fetter, Garrett, Hutt, Machlup, Nock, Flynn, and many others.
In fact, the
Mises Institute has become the mainspring of old liberal theory
the world over.
And
yet that reality has raised a question that we might be tempted
to dismiss but one I think we should engage. The question is this:
by doing what we do, are we not somehow skewing the marketplace
of ideas, tilting the great intellectual debate in our favor? And
is it right to enter into the rarified world of academia with an
agenda that is scientific, moral, and political? In short, if liberty
is such a good idea, and if the Misesian tradition is so hot, why
does it need our help?
For centuries,
intellectuals of the old liberal bent, as Mises was, had believed
that education alone would work toward the benefit of liberty. Jefferson
is a classic case in point. As people became more prosperous under
liberty, the theory went, they could devote ever more personal resources
toward schooling. Children would not need to work but rather could
be taught literacy in all important subjects. The most promising
students among them would continue their education to eventually
become leaders in society at all levels.
In civic life,
there was one end sought: the protection, preservation, and promotion
of human liberty. The city of man, as embodied in liberty, was to
be advanced through the single tool of education. They saw education
and liberty as a unified project, one that would not really be separable
in theory or fact. They believed that the blessings of liberty would
be so apparent that all forms of learning would assist in the grand
goal of enhancing cultural understanding of liberty.
Nor did they
imagine the possibility of failure, must less of decivilization.
That entire generation was convinced that progress was inevitable
through the spread of freedom. Now that freedom had been discovered,
there would be no going back.
In retrospect,
the generation that absorbed enlightenment ideals was naïve
in the extreme. If we look around the world today, we see that education
has advanced in every sector. We cannot conceive of a child not
attempting to gain admission to college. We tell the youth that
the secret to success is to stay in school. As for elementary school
and high school, we regard them as so important that they are public
goods, to be provided by the state. And just to make sure that everyone
gets an education, the law forbids kids from working, a fact which
labor unions like and support if only to keep cheap labor out of
the market. Access to great books, great minds, the best ideas of
all of human history, are everywhere.
But has this
education assisted in the bolstering of liberty? All data indicate
that the more objectively educated people become today, the more
likely they are to trust the state as a means of social salvation.
You can map this demographically. The higher the level of education,
the more the inclination toward socialist thinking. Why is this?
Hayek might say that it has something to do with the hubris of intellectuals
who believe that they can concoct a better social order in their
minds than the one that freedom can create. Mises might draw attention
to the resentment on the part of intellectuals that they are not
as valued by society as entrepreneurs or sports stars. Rothbard
might point out that intellectuals are drawn to the state as a way
of legitimizing their ideas and securing their financial well-being.
Whatever the
case, it is a fact that would have astounded people in the 18th
century, that the more education a person receives, the more they
are drawn to social ideals that can only be realized under complete
despotism, if then.
A person like
Jefferson would have found this inconceivable. Meanwhile, the students
who are taught in public school are being socialized in an uncritical
attitude toward the state, and are often made victims of political
fashion. Rather than read Jefferson or the great books, they are
instructed in recycling and phony history designed to bolster political
agendas.
The enlightenment
intellectuals’ attitude toward education was oddly defective for
three reasons. The first is that the structure of the institution
doing the educating matters a great deal. If the institution is
owned and managed by the state, we can expect that the ideas it
promotes will be favorable to the regime.
This should
not be a controversial claim. If, for example, Wal-Mart were running
our schools, who wouldn't be surprised that criticism of Wal-Mart
would be kept to a minimum and that pro-Wal-Mart attitudes would
be cultivated among students? We would expect that. It would not
shock us. We would just consider the source.
But how rarely
do we consider the source when it comes to state-funded education!
There is an assumption that people make that education when sponsored
by the state will be objective and keep the student's best interest
at heart. This assumption makes no sense whatever, but it is nonetheless
widely held. We encounter this often in dealing with the issue of
elementary and secondary schools. If someone attends a Baptist or
Catholic school, people ask how they can stand all that religious
indoctrination. But have you ever heard a student in public school
questioned as to how they can stand all that statist indoctrination?
It's not likely.
The ownership
and control of institutions does in fact matter for the quality
of education a student receives and what the student will be taught.
The second
point overlooked by the enlightenment generation is that ideology
is more powerful over human minds than the mere abstraction of ideas
in general. Especially today, it is nearly impossible to escape
the pervasiveness of ideology. In the guise of biology or earth
science, students are routinely fed environmentalist propaganda
that blames capitalism for all the world's ills. In the guise of
social science, socialist plans for political reconstruction are
fobbed off on the unsuspecting.
There is such
a thing as pure knowledge but it is increasingly hard to find. What
this means is that more knowledge does not necessarily lead to social
progress. It could in fact lead to social regress. It depends on
the structure of the institution doing the teaching and its ideological
perspective.
The third point
overlooked in the enlightenment view of knowledge is that those
with the strongest motive to influence the future will tend to dominate
the debate and thus control the purposes to which education is directed.
And in any society, the state seeks to be the leading influence
in the culture -- and it often succeeds. At some point in the life
of every libertarian, we come to realize that vast amounts of what
the media report are taken directly from the press releases of government
agencies. This is just one of the ways in which the government manages
to market itself and its priorities throughout society.
And this point
about marketing ideas is a critical one. Let me explain this by
way of analogy to the marketplace for goods and services. We've
all had friends who claim to have come up with the idea of some
product that is currently making a big splash in the marketplace.
It's an uninteresting claim because it overlooks a critical fact.
The hard work of enterprise is not so much in having an idea but
in acting on it. Here is the step that makes the difference that
leads to profitability.
An idea must
have economic viability, that is to say, it must become an efficient
part of the structure of the social allocation of goods and services.
The iPhone might have been technologically viable five years ago,
but only this summer did it become economically viable. And technical
superiority does not necessarily equate to economic superiority.
Once the problem of economics is overcome, there is the all-important
issue of marketing, which means nothing other than getting the word
out to others concerning the availability to the world.
Without economic
and marketing considerations, the best ideas in the world will lie
dormant. Your next-door neighbor might be sitting on the greatest
formula for car wax that has yet to be found. But what does that
mean in the real world? Essentially it means nothing until your
neighbor discovers a way to turn that formula into the real thing,
and further finds a way for others in society to acquire it.
It is precisely
the same with ideas. If Mises had merely imagined the ideas in Human
Action but never wrote them down, the world would be a very
different place. If he had written them down but never sought a
publisher, nothing would have come of them. And even after finding
a publisher and seeing the physical book appear in 1940 in German,
he had an additional problem. His ideas were not yet accessible
in English. And so to accomplish this goal, he worked more years
to present these ideas to a new postwar world, in a different language.
Why did he
do this? Mises understood that ideas are what drive history forward.
But ideas alone are not enough. They must be presented in an effective
format that can be marketed, so to speak. And then they must be
presented in a way that draws people to them.
Mises, in contrast
to the enlightenment thinkers, knew that these last two stages of
intellectual work could not be overlooked. He saw that the world
of ideas is subject to the laws of economics in the same way that
the market for goods and services is. There is a strong element
of entrepreneurship necessary for ideas to succeed. Mises was so
emphatic on this point that he went so far as to place the blame
for social collapse on those who failed to fight for and promote
good ideas.
In Theory
and History, the first book that we published, Mises wrote
that all ideas, whether good or bad, originate in the minds of individuals.
But these ideas can only take hold if they are accepted by society.
There is no guarantee that these ideas will be accepted. People
will embrace bad ideas even unto their own self-destruction. But
if they choose what is destructive, Mises wrote, "the fault is
not theirs alone. It is no less the fault of the pioneers of the
good causes in not having succeeded in bringing forward their thoughts
in a more convincing form."
He sums up
the point with the following claim: "The favorable evolution of
human affairs depends ultimately on the ability of the human race
to beget not only authors but also heralds and disseminators
of beneficial ideas."
Thus did Mises
know that it is not enough to hold the right views, though this
is an essential step. It is just as important to do everything possible
to see that these views are propagated and made compelling in a
way that will transform society and politics. And this is why he
became an advocate of a new institution that would be dedicated
to liberty. This institution, he hoped, would not only be a source
of new ideas. It would work to bring them about and realize them
within the affairs of the human population.
Is this somehow
skewing the marketplace for ideas? The claim is absurd, since the
marketplace for ideas is built entirely upon ideas that have been
discovered, heralded, and disseminated and thereby become part of
the structure of the world in which we live. In the same way that
an entrepreneur cannot be content to merely imagine a shopping mall
or a new search engine, but must also see these dreams realized
economically and then marketed, in that same way we must not and
cannot be content to merely hold sound views. We must work to see
them realized.
And yet we
are an impatient people, are we not? We want to see the effects
of our work play themselves out in our own time, and we see the
state expanding and liberty shrinking and we wonder whether or not
work in the world of ideas is really worth it. We might consider
that were it not for the opposition voices of the Misesians, the
state would have had a freer hand, and our despotism would be worse
than it is.
We might also
consider that there is a time lag between the propagation of an
idea and its realization.
Finally, consider
that the crumbling of a failed ideology is not always observable;
we only know it has happened once the effects are plain to the world.
For example, in retrospect we now know that the socialist idea in
Russia had been in a continued downfall for some 50 years before
the state finally crumbled. And yet only a few years before that
crumbling the Western academics were assuring us that Soviet communism
was a permanent feature of the world, and that its wonderful economic
system would someday overtake our own.
We are so fortunate
to live in times when we do in fact see the evidence of burgeoning
all around us, from new technologies to new economic development
to the practical decline of the state in managing world affairs.
We have seen undeniable evidence of the failure of all-out planning
and the amazing beauty created by the market economy. We have seen
the complete collapse of the socialist idea. Mises had no such luxury.
He saw war, depression, central planning, socialism national
and international and inflation, and that pretty well sums
up the whole of what he saw between his birth and death. And yet
he fought on. Why?
Murray Rothbard
once wrote an entire paper discussing this very point. He pointed
out that Mises's social philosophy reinforced his battle for what
is true. He knew that civilization and human existence were at stake.
High theory is important but it is not enough. The advocate of the
free market must carry the struggle to all levels of society. For
Mises, no form of education was beneath his dignity. There was no
separating theory from practice. This is why we must be wholly dedicated
to liberty, peace, and free markets. We must come out squarely in
favor of human life and flourishing. Rothbard concludes that "science
may be value-free, but men can never be, and Ludwig von Mises never
shirked the responsibilities of being human."
I can tell
you, from my long friendship with Murray, that he might as well
have been writing about himself. This spirit is with us tonight,
in this room, in all we do, and all we will do for the next 25 years,
for neither have you shirked your responsibilities.
Thanks
to your generosity and help, in this year alone, we have seen an
unbelievable increase in all our activities, from publishing to
distribution to education. We have a new masterful biography of
Mises that reconstructs the history and meaning of his time. We
have ever more students and professors. Our ideas are reaching more
and more people every day. And yet our work is nowhere near being
done. A day must never pass when we cannot point to progress. We
have inspiring models, not only in the work but also in the lives
of Mises and Rothbard.
History, as
always, hangs in the balance. May we all say that we did everything
we could do to serve the good of humanity, to never give in to evil,
to not merely oppose it in our hearts and minds, but also to proceed
ever more boldly against it, and to displace the evil of statism
with the blessings of liberty, which is the basis of civilization
itself.
From the bottom
of my heart, I thank you for your support of this cause. Now, onward
to another and more astonishing 25 years.
October
22, 2007
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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