What
Should You Read?
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
TomWoods.com
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by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.: Florida
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People often
ask me what books they ought to read in order to get quickly up
to speed on economics, politics, and history. Here are some suggestions.
If you're
like me, you are annoyed by books that teach you three new things.
My time is limited. I like books that are full of things I didn't
know, or ideas I'd never thought of.
The books
I recommend below belong in that category. They teach you something
new and unexpected on every page. And they are a perfect antidote
to the propaganda fed to us in the ideological prison camps where
most of us spent our formative years. I list them in no particular
order.
Economics
in One Lesson, by Henry Hazlitt. Important for beginners.
You can read
it online. Also useful for beginners is Peter Schiff's book
How
an Economy Grows and Why It Crashes.
The
Revolution: A Manifesto, by Ron Paul. This is another good
one for beginners. It has a good track record as a proselytizing
device.
Democracy:
The God that Failed, by Hans-Hermann Hoppe. Just read it.
Trust me on this.
The
Quest for Community, by Robert Nisbet. Here is a graduate
course in political philosophy. Except in this one, the state is
not the glorious summit of civilization and the indispensable source
of human flourishing. As the new edition explains, "Nisbet
argued that the rise of the powerful modern state had eroded the
sources of community the family, the neighborhood, the church,
the guild. Alienation and loneliness inevitably resulted. But as
the traditional ties that bind fell away, the human impulse toward
community led people to turn even more to the government itself,
allowing statism even totalitarianism to flourish."
The
Left, the Right, and the State, by Lew Rockwell. Lew (who
of course runs the indispensable LewRockwell.com)
did the world an incalculable service with the founding of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute, but he is grossly underrated as a thinker
in his own right. He has extended Rothbardian thought in numerous
ways, and has influenced my own thinking more than almost anyone
in the world.
The
Austrian Theory of the Trade Cycle and Other Essays. Features
essays by Ludwig von Mises, F.A. Hayek, Gottfried Haberler, and
Murray N. Rothbard. An effective introduction to the Austrian theory
of the business cycle. You can read
or listen
to it online.
What
Has Government Done to Our Money? by Murray N. Rothbard.
An excellent little overview of the origin of money and its fate
at the hands of government. You can listen
to this book (along with The
Case for a 100 Percent Gold Dollar) for free.
Egalitarianism
as a Revolt Against Nature and Other Essays, by Murray N.
Rothbard. The quality of the essays in this book is astounding.
You will not think the same way ever again after reading Anatomy
of the State and War, Peace, and the State, to
name just two. You can read
it online.
After you read
these, I recommend the following:
A
Theory of Socialism and Capitalism, by Hans-Hermann Hoppe.
Hoppes books put everything together for me. You can read
this one online.
The
Economics and Ethics of Private Property, by Hans-Hermann
Hoppe. This book blew me away when I first read it. Its title makes
it sound dull. It is one of the most intellectually exciting books
I have ever read.
Man,
Economy, and State: A Treatise on Economic Principles, by
Murray N. Rothbard. This one, and the two that follow, are for the
especially ambitious. This is a systematic exposition of Austrian
economics. The sheer elegance of the Austrian system is on impressive
display here. The entire text is available online.
A study guide is available for purchase
and online.
Human
Action: A Treatise on Economics, by Ludwig von Mises. Available
online, and as a free
audiobook. See also the study
guide, which can be purchased
or read online.
(Some disagree with me, but I favor beginning with Rothbard before
moving on to Human Action.)
Money,
Bank Credit, and Economic Cycles, by Jesús Huerta
de Soto. Here is the Austrian theory on money, banking, and business
cycles, presented in systematic fashion, and compared with the Chicago
and Keynesian alternatives. I have a friend who was so impressed
by this book that he learned Spanish so he could pursue his Ph.D.
under the author in Spain. It is also available in pdf.
I could name
other books, naturally, but to my mind these are the absolutely
indispensable ones.
One of the
goals of my own books, for that matter, has been to get people up
to speed on various topics as quickly and with as little exertion
on their part as possible. Rollback,
my most recent title, covers a very
wide range of topics and replies to the most common objections
to the free society. I was delighted to hear a student tell me just
the other day, I realized as I was reading this book that
it would help me win debates. That was part of the idea, for
sure. I tried to do the same thing in some of my other titles, like
The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History, 33
Questions About American History, Meltdown
[on the financial crisis], and Nullification.
December
14, 2012
Thomas
E. Woods, Jr. [send him
mail; visit his
website], a senior fellow of the Ludwig von Mises Institute,
is the creator of Tom
Woods’s Liberty Classroom, a libertarian educational
resource. He is the author of eleven books, including the New
York Times bestsellers Meltdown
(on the financial crisis; read Ron Paul’s foreword)
and The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History, and most
recently Nullification
and Rollback.
Copyright
© 2012 Thomas
Woods
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