Ideas
Are Our Best Weapon
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Everyone
interested in ideas has surely had the following experience. You
become curious about a certain topic. You start with periodicals,
read a bit more deeply, become engaged more broadly, and start to
buy and check out book after book.
Pretty soon
you have a good-sized library developing. You speak the language.
You know the players. You apply the ideas to understanding the world.
But there are still gaps, and you dig and dig to fill them.
Then one day
you run across something completely different: a book that not only
incorporates all that you learned so far, but surpasses them all
in breadth and depth. You marvel at how much time and energy you
might have saved had you run across this earlier. The mind behind
the book is so impressive that it makes all the other authors seem
like bit players.
What's more,
the author makes available to you something you sought but could
never find and didn't even know existed: a rigorously defended theoretical
structure that turns scattered bits of knowledge into a bulletproof
edifice of thought.
If the topic
in question is economics, the book that puts it all together is
Human
Action by Ludwig von Mises. What is it like to encounter
the book for the first time after years of reading in economics?
Imagine yourself in a large mansion that is dark but for the nightlights
along the wall. You stumble from switch to switch, feeling your
way around. Then someone comes along and throws on a switch that
illuminates the whole building, inside and out, including the grounds
outside. This is what Human Action does.
It has all
the features of the best treatises that came before, such as J.B.
Say's and Frank Fetter's a thorough explanation that takes
the reader step by step but goes far beyond them all in providing
a massive methodological structure that shows how to go about thinking
of economics and its relationship to social and natural science.
It offers a theory of theory, a theory itself, applications to the
real world, and plenty of historical illustration along the way.
It's a wonder
that the book exists at all, and you can only stand in awe of the
mind that created it. But the marvel is even more poignant when
you consider the historical context.
Mises had been
a famous economist in the early interwar period on the Continent.
In 1912, he had written about money and changed the way economists
understand the topic.
In 1922, he
wrote a book that crushed socialism as a theoretical structure and
started a debate that lasted for decades. He had put together a
theory of the business cycle that anticipated the cause of the Great
Depression and the solution to it.
There had been
other books: one on economic reform after World War I, one on liberalism
as a political ideology and another on interventionism. There were
methodological essays and there was a burgeoning seminar that met
regularly.
The big theoretical
book had not yet appeared, and not even Mises's closest associates
knew that one was coming. But then tragedy came. Precisely as Mises
anticipated, unresolved conflicts left over from the Great War,
combined with bad economic policy and a change of ideology, led
to the rise of a two competing forms of totalitarianism. Mises was
the sworn enemy of both.
Mises had to
leave his home. His seminar broke up. Indeed, the whole intellectual
firmament that had created the first generation of Misesians was
being destroyed. Mises found a position, a sanctuary in Geneva,
Switzerland, a country that he knew was most likely to maintain
neutrality in the coming war. He left Austria in 1934 and took up
residence at the Graduate Institute of International Studies.
He used his
time extraordinarily well. Despite all the horrors developing in
Europe and around the world, his grand treatise appeared in 1940.
It was called Nationalökonomie. It was in German. Think
of what you know about history and imagine how well a book on economic
science, from a free-market perspective, written in German and published
in Geneva, would do if published at the start of one of history's
great calamities. Mises's book died on the date it was published.
Then Mises
left Europe and came to the United States
He had no money.
His papers in Austria were confiscated by the German armies; his
apartment was ransacked. He was 60 years old and starting over.
His spoken English wasn't great. He had no academic position. But
he refused to give in. He forged ahead, and his publishing schedule
started anew in the United States, thanks to a friendly editor at
Yale University Press and some other disciples in influential positions.
He was asked
by Yale to work on a translation of his 1940 work. A daunting task!
But he got to work. He not only translated it; he expanded it, strengthening
the methodological sections and added inspiring material on the
future of economics.
Everyone who
has read both Human Action and its German predecessor says
that Human Action is even better.
The book was
immense: 900 pages. Yale was reluctant to commit to it. Who could
believe it would become a publishing sensation? But it did. To read
the internal memos among the publisher's staff they expressed
shock and amazement at the sales is amusing indeed.
Human Action
became the essential thread that wove together the fabric of free-market
economics in the postwar period in America. Everyone who made a
difference later Murray Rothbard, Ayn Rand, Henry Hazlitt,
Hans Sennholz, and hundreds more read it and was permanently
influenced by it. So large does this book loom that we cannot even
imagine how the structure of libertarian ideas would look today
without it.
People write
often about the postwar emergence of the "conservative movement"
(a phrase that I've come to loathe). As important as F.A. Hayek,
Richard Weaver, Russell Kirk, and all the rest were, it was Mises's
book that saved free-market thought in the United States. But it
didn't stop there. His book became one for the ages.
Even without
knowing any of this history, a student can pick up the book today
and experience precisely what generations of readers have experienced:
that overwhelming sense of intellectual enlightenment, that sense
of having found the missing piece that makes the puzzle of the world
suddenly come together.
As anyone who
knows the book well can report, it stands up to two, three, or even
a dozen readings. Each time, you find more in it. Over the years
at the Mises Institute, we've conducted many reading groups about
Human Action. We have taken as little as one week
students are completely exhausted at the end and as long
as a semester. But it is never enough time. The book is not only
a complete economics education on its own; it is a supremely fertile
ground for extensions, applications, and advancement in every direction.
What is the
main contribution of the book? It is the establishment of economics
as a science of a special sort: one that investigates the logical
implications of the fact of action to elucidate fixed laws of cause
and effect. This is important because people tend to make two errors
regarding economics.
They
believe it is either not a science because it deals with human beings,
or it is a science requiring positivist methods that do not account
for the irreducibly human ability to choose among economic alternatives.
Neither is tenable, but the third option is not generally known:
to see the task of economics as discovering, explaining, and applying
the economic laws that dictate the limits of the intellectual and
political imagination while making full allowance for the reality
of individual choice.
I'll not continue
with my explanation here. But I would like to say something about
the Scholar's Edition of Human Action published by the Mises
Institute. The idea came to us when we first found some writings
from the 1940s in which Mises strongly opposed conscription. The
mystery is that Human Action famously defends conscription. Later
investigation revealed that it was only the 1963 and 1966 editions
in which Mises added his comments on this issue. We looked for other
changes between the original edition and those that appeared years
later. Much had been left out and much added.
The changes
weren't entirely objectionable, and, in any case, they expressed
Mises's attitudes at the time. But regardless of what you think
of later editions, these changes were added in the heat of the political
moment, whereas the great merit of the 1949 edition is precisely
that he wrote a book for the ages in a time of great political upheaval.
His book was light, not heat. Clearly, this original edition needed
to be in print, just as anyone would be interested in the first
edition of The
Wealth of Nations or Say's Principles. There is also
the issue of citation: the first edition remains the most cited.
So
the Scholar's Edition took the first edition, added a marvelous
index that had been published separately in 1954, plus a long introduction
explaining the differences among all the editions. We used the best
materials available, and spared no expense on the binding.
One final recommendation.
If you are reading the book for the first time, and do not yet have
the patience for detailed methodological argument, you can begin
on page 200, while saving the material you skipped for the end.
This is a profitable approach for many people.
Mises
believed that ideas are our best weapon in the struggle for liberty.
In this case, Human Action is our stockpile. It is a towering
achievement, a nearly miraculous legacy that this great man left
the world. It will continue to be read for many generations, and
be widely seen as a great achievement of the 20th century.
August
5, 2006
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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