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The Myth of the Older Historical School of Economics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 December 2008

David F. Lindenfeld
Affiliation:
Louisiana State UniversityBaton Rouge La.

Extract

It is a commonplace of German historiography and the history of economic thought in particular that German economists pursued a Sonderweq in the second half of the nineteenth century, rejecting the theoretical bases of laissez-faire doctrines that were common in Britain and France in favor of a study of economic history. This is generally viewed as taking place in two stages: first, an “older German historical school” that began to question the accepted dogmas of Smithian economics beginning in the 1840s, with the work of Wilhelm Roscher, Bruno Hildebrand, and Karl Knies. This allegedly preceded the “younger historical school” of the 1870s and after, dominated by Gustav Schomoller, Lujo Brentano, and Georg Friedrich Knapp. In calling the existence of this older school a myth, I want to draw on the currently fashionable connotation of the word “myth”: to say, in other words, that this received notion contains some important elements of truth—but masked in such a way as to distort its significance.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Conference Group for Central European History of the American Historical Association 1993

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References

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7. The number of lectures in the history of economics fluctuated from sixteen in the 1840s to forty in the '50s to twenty three in the '60s to thirty seven in the '70s, whereas those in economic history went from one to five to nine to nineteen in the same period. These data are based on a nearly complete survey of lectures in the Staatswissenschaften from 1815 to 1914, drawn from catalogues, announcements in the Allgemeine Literatur-Zeitung and the Literarisches Centralblatt für Deutschland, and the former Zentrales Staatsarchiv Merseburg, Rep 76 V a. The sources were unavailable for. 25 percent of the cases in the 1840s, 2.25 percent in the 1850s, 0 percent in the 1860s., and. 25 percent in the 1870s. A further discussion of these data will be included in my forthcoming book, “The Practical Imagination: the German Sciences of State in the Nineteenth Century.”

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