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Index
Cover Image
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Introduction to the Third Edition
Foreword to the 1978 Edition
Preface to the English-Language Edition
Preface to the German Edition
1. The Task and Scope of the Science of Human Action
I. The Nature and Development of the Social Sciences
1. Origin in the historical and normative sciences
2. Economics
3. The program of sociology and the quest for historical laws
4. The standpoint of historicism
5. The standpoint of empiricism
6. The logical character of the universally valid science of human action
7. Sociology and economics: Some comments on the history of economic thought
II. The Scope and Meaning of the System of A Priori Theorems
1. The basic concept of action and its categorical conditions
2. A priori theory and empirical confirmation
3. Theory and the facts of experience
4. The distinction between means and ends: The "irrational"
III. Science and Value
1. The meaning of neutrality with regard to value judgments
2. Science and technology: Economics and liberalism
3. The universalist critique of methodological individualism
4. The experience of a whole and scientific cognition
5. The errors of the universalist doctrine
6. "Objective" meaning
IV. Utilitarianism and Rationalism and the Theory of Action
1. Vierkandt's instinct sociology
2. Myrdal's theory of attitudes
3. The critique of rationalism by ethnology and prehistory
4. Instinct sociology and behaviorism
2. Sociology and History
Introduction
1. The Methodological and the Logical Problem
2. The Logical Character of History
3. The Ideal Type and Sociological Law
4. The Basis of the Misconceptions Concerning the Logical Character of Economics
5. History Without Sociology
6. Universal History and Sociology
7. Sociological Laws and Historical Laws
8. Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis in Economics
9. The Universal Validity of Sociological Knowledge
Conclusion
3. Conception and Understanding
1. Cognition From Without and Cognition From Within
2. Conception and Understanding
3. The Irrational as an Object of Cognition
4. Sombart's Critique of Economics
5. Logic and the Social Sciences
4. On the Development of the Subjective Theory of Value
1. The Delimitation of the "Economic"
2. Preferring as the Basic Element in Human Conduct
3. Eudaemonism and the Theory of Value
4. Economics and Psychology
5. Economics and Technology
6. Monetary Calculation and the "Economic in the Narrower Sense"
7. Exchange Ratios and the Limits of Monetary Calculation
8. Changes in the Data
9. The Role of Time in the Economy
10. "Resistances"
11. Costs
5. Remarks on the Fundamental Problem of the Subjective Theory of Value
6. The Psychological Basis of the Opposition to Economic Theory
Introduction
1. The Problem
2. The Hypothesis of Marxism and the Sociology of Knowledge
3. The Role of Resentment
4. Freedom and Necessity
Conclusion
7. The Controversy Over the Theory of Value
8. Inconvertible Capital
1. The Influence of the Past on Production
2. Trade Policy and the Influence of the Past
3. The Malinvestment of Capital
4. The Adaptability of Workers
5. The Entrepreneur's View of Malinvestment
Index
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
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