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The Collected Short Works of Thorstein Veblen - Volume II

by Thornstein Veblen

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This three-volume collection contains Veblen's publications in academic journals and other scholarly press. The articles are organized under major chapters covering Veblen's pioneering thoughts on social organization; economic theory; social theory; institutions, social organization and economic performance; contemporary policies and social movements; social applications of evolutionary reasoning. Veblen made numerous seminal contributions on issues as diverse as the social role of science, the economic and social competition between entrepreneurs and engineers as well as a sobering criticism of the still under-appreciated preconceptions of economics as a science.

The collection brings together much work that has been inaccessible in print and provides instructive reading for researchers on institutional economics, evolutionary economics as well as those with an interest on the history of economic thought. This edition has been professionally typeset from the original articles for easier reading and includes a comprehensive index. It is printed on quality, hard-bound volumes, resulting in an indispensable contemporary edition of Veblen's timeless ideas.

VOLUME II

REFLECTIONS ON ECONOMIC THEORY
Chapter 1 - Why Is Economics Not An Evolutionary Science? (The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1898)
Chapter 2 - Industrial And Pecuniary Employments (Publications of the American Economic Association, 1901)
Chapter 3 - On The Nature Of Capital (The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1908)
Chapter 4 - Bohm-Bawerk's Definition Of Capital And The Source Of Wages (Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1892)
Chapter 5 - Gustav Schmoller's Economics (Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1901)
Chapter 6 - The Use Of Loan Credit In Modern Business (The Decennial Publications Of The University Of Chicago, 1903)
Chapter 7 - Credit And Prices (The Journal of Political Economy, 1905)
Chapter 8 - The Overproduction Fallacy – I&II (The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1892)

SOCIAL THEORY
Chapter 1 - The Barbarian Status of Women (American Journal of Sociology, 1899)
Chapter 2 - The Economic Theory of Women's Dress (Popular Science Monthly, 1894)
Chapter 3 - The Beginnings of Ownership (American Journal of Sociology, 1898)
Chapter 4 - The Instinct of Workmanship and the Irksomeness of Labor (American Journal of Sociology, 1898)


INSTITUTIONS, SOCIAL ORGANIZATION AND ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
Chapter 1 - Christian Morals and the Competitive System (International Journal of Ethics, 1910)
Chapter 2 - The Intellectual Pre-Eminence of Jews in Modern Europe (Political Science Quarterly, 1919)
Chapter 3 - The Opportunity of Japan (The Journal of Race Development, 1915)

INDEX

Thorstein Bunde Veblen (1857-1929) was an American economist and sociologist, notable for his contributions to institutional economics. Born in Cato, Wisconsin, of Norwegian-American parents, Veblen was educated in Carleton College, John Hopkins University and Yale University, graduating with a doctoral thesis on "Ethical Grounds of a Doctrine of Retribution". His contacts with philosophers, sociologists and other social scientists as much as with economists are reflected in the critical tone of his writing on economic issues and his witty description of capitalist economic and social structures. Following his academic appointment to the University of Chicago, he became an editor of the Journal of Political Economy and enjoyed widespread accolade for his books "The Theory of the Leisure Class" and "The Theory of Business Enterprise". His diverse writings are heavily influenced by the evolutionary turn apparent in much of social science at the time and seek social analogies of natural mechanisms of speciation, competition and selection. In contrast to the ideological divisions of his time, Veblen was disdainful of workers and entrepreneurs in equal measure, ascribing special role to functional knowledge and to engineers as a force for social innovation.

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Bibliographic Information

Book Title
The Collected Short Works of Thorstein Veblen - Volume II
ISBN
978-1-62273-012-4
Edition
1st
Number of pages
224
Physical size
236mm x 160mm
Publication date
March 2014
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