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Economic Science and the Austrian Method_3

Economic Science and the Austrian Method_3

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Hans-Hennann Hoppeof economic phenomena as objective data, extending inspace <strong>and</strong> subject to quantifiable measurement-in strictanalogy to <strong>the</strong> phenomena of <strong>the</strong> natural sciences-<strong>the</strong>peculiar skepticism of <strong>the</strong> empiricist economist may bedescribed as that ofa social engineer who will not guaranteeanyth· Ing.42The o<strong>the</strong>r challenge came from <strong>the</strong> side of<strong>the</strong> historicistschool. Indeed, during Mises's life in Austria <strong>and</strong> Switzerl<strong>and</strong>,<strong>the</strong> historicist philosophy was <strong>the</strong> prevailing ideologyof <strong>the</strong> German-speaking universities <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir establishment.With <strong>the</strong> upsurge of empiricism this formerprominence has been reduced considerabl~ But overroughly <strong>the</strong> last decade historicism has regained momentumamong <strong>the</strong> Western world's academia. Today it is with useverywhere under <strong>the</strong> names of hermeneutics, rhetoric,deconstructionism, <strong>and</strong> epistemological anarchism. 43For historicism, <strong>and</strong> most conspicuously for its contemporaryversions, <strong>the</strong> model is not nature but a literary text.<strong>Economic</strong> phenomena, according to <strong>the</strong> historicist doctrine,are not objective magnitudes that can be measured. Instead,<strong>the</strong>y are subjective expressions <strong>and</strong> interpretations unfoldingin history to be understood <strong>and</strong> interpreted by <strong>the</strong> economist420n <strong>the</strong> relativistic consequences ofempiricism-positivism see also Hoppe,A Theory ofSocialism <strong>and</strong> Capitalism (Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1989),chapter 6; idem, "The Intellectual Cover for Socialism."43See Ludwig von Mises, The Historical Setting of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Austrian</strong> School of<strong>Economic</strong>s (Auburn, Ala.: Ludwig von Mises Institute, 1984); idem, Erinnerungen(Stuttgart: Gustav Fischer, 1978); idem, Theory <strong>and</strong> History, chapter 10; MurrayN. Rothbard, Ludwig von Mises: Schola1j Creat01; Hero (Auburn, Ala.: Ludwig vonMises Institute, 1988); for a critical survey ofhistoricist ideas see also Karl Popper,The Poverty ofHistoricism; for a representative of<strong>the</strong> older version of a historicistinterpretation of economics see Werner Sombart, Die drei Nationalokonomien(Munich: Duncker & Humblot, 1930); for <strong>the</strong> modern, hermeneutical twistDonald McCloskey, The Rhetoric of<strong>Economic</strong>s (Madison: University ofWisconsinPress, 1985); Ludwig Lachmann, "From Mises to Shackle: An Essay on <strong>Austrian</strong><strong>Economic</strong>s <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> Kaleidic Society,"Journal of<strong>Economic</strong> Literature (1976).The Ludwig von Mises Institute • 53

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