Man Against The State | Liberty and Property (by Ludwig von Mises) @ManAgainstTheState | Uploaded February 2012 | Updated October 2024, 8 hours ago.
A reading of "Liberty and Property", a transcript of a speech given by Ludwig von Mises in 1956.
You can hear the original recording of Mises here: mises.org/libprop.asp
The text can be found as a PDF here: mises.org/books/liberty_and_property.pdf
This essay can be bought from the Mises Store: mises.org/store/Liberty-and-Property-P629C1.aspx
Description from the Mises Store...
In 1956, the Mont Pelerin Society was entering a difficult period in which its intellectual lights were drifting away from liberalism of the old school. Ludwig von Mises used his speech that year to explain why this was a terrible trend. He didn't rebuke anyone. What he did was back away from the events of the day to provide a sweeping reconstruction of economic history from the ancient world to the present. He provided a model of how to think outside one's own generation to understand the really big issues and the moral and practical urgency of embracing total freedom.
The result is an essay for the ages. It is profound, visionary, and compelling beyond belief. Would that every undergraduate, or even citizen, read this piece. In here, Mises describes the revolutionary meaning of capitalism in human history, and how it was responsible for the most spectacular increases in the standard of living of the common man ever. It was mass production that lead people to live longer, healthier, and happier lives.
Contemporary reports from the event in which he delivered this paper suggest that the people there were uninterested in Mises's point of view, but this is much to their shame. For what he left us with remains one of the most dazzling presentations of the case for economic liberty ever written. It is the perfect combination of high intelligence, vast historical understanding, and moral passion.
A reading of "Liberty and Property", a transcript of a speech given by Ludwig von Mises in 1956.
You can hear the original recording of Mises here: mises.org/libprop.asp
The text can be found as a PDF here: mises.org/books/liberty_and_property.pdf
This essay can be bought from the Mises Store: mises.org/store/Liberty-and-Property-P629C1.aspx
Description from the Mises Store...
In 1956, the Mont Pelerin Society was entering a difficult period in which its intellectual lights were drifting away from liberalism of the old school. Ludwig von Mises used his speech that year to explain why this was a terrible trend. He didn't rebuke anyone. What he did was back away from the events of the day to provide a sweeping reconstruction of economic history from the ancient world to the present. He provided a model of how to think outside one's own generation to understand the really big issues and the moral and practical urgency of embracing total freedom.
The result is an essay for the ages. It is profound, visionary, and compelling beyond belief. Would that every undergraduate, or even citizen, read this piece. In here, Mises describes the revolutionary meaning of capitalism in human history, and how it was responsible for the most spectacular increases in the standard of living of the common man ever. It was mass production that lead people to live longer, healthier, and happier lives.
Contemporary reports from the event in which he delivered this paper suggest that the people there were uninterested in Mises's point of view, but this is much to their shame. For what he left us with remains one of the most dazzling presentations of the case for economic liberty ever written. It is the perfect combination of high intelligence, vast historical understanding, and moral passion.