Legal Foundations of Capitalism

Regular price €179.80
A01=John R. Commons
amendment
Author_John R. Commons
behavioral theory of value
Business Goodwill
Business Process
capitalistic market forms
cases
Category=JHB
Chief Tenants
common
Common Law Courts
Common Law Meaning
complex human relationships
court decisions economic theory
Despotic Dominion
Economic Coercion
Economic Rent
economic sociology
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
evolutionary economics
fourteenth
Fourteenth Amendment
Hedonic Economists
house
incorporeal
Incorporeal Property
Industrial Government
institutional economics
judicial decision analysis
Justice Brewer
King's Prerogative
King’s Prerogative
law
Lawful Money
liberties and rights
Maximum Net Income
Military Tenures
Minnesota Rate Case
munn
Munn Case
Net Operating Income
Opposite Parties
Physical Things
property
Remedial Powers
slaughter
Slaughter House Cases
social custom influence
Volitional Theory
volitional theory of psychology

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138527126
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In what has universally been recognized as a classic of institutional economics, John R. Commons combined the skills of a professional economist, the sensibilities of an American historian, and the passion of an active participant in the conflicts of individuals, self-interest of groups, and function of voluntary associations.

The aim of this volume is to work out an evolutionary and behavioral theory of value. In order to do so thoroughly, Commons examines the decisions of the courts. Doing so compelled an examination of what the courts mean by reasonable value. Commons found that the answer was tied up with a notion of reasonable conduct. It was Commons who carried the study of the habits and customs of social life to the next stage: the decisions of the courts that are based on custom and that profoundly impact the nature and function of the economic system as such.

Reviewing Legal Foundations of Capitalism, Wesley Mitchell declared that Commons carried this "analysis further along his chosen line than any of his predecessors. Into our knowledge of capitalism he has incorporated a great body of new materials which no one else has used adequately." And writing in the same American Economic Review twenty-one years later, Selig Perlman noted that "To Commons the workingmen were not abstract building blocks out of which a favored deity called History was to shape the architecture of the new society, but concrete beings with legitimate ambitions for a higher standard of living and for more dignity in their lives." This edition is graced with a special introduction that places Commons in proper academic as well as intellectual context.