Ralph Raico
Born
in New York City, The United States
October 23, 1936
Died
December 13, 2016
Genre
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Great Wars And Great Leaders: A Libertarian Rebuttal
by
4 editions
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published
2010
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Communist Manifesto/Social Contract
by
4 editions
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published
2006
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Russia and the Soviet Union
by
5 editions
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published
2006
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Germany
by
2 editions
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published
2006
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Central Europe
by
2 editions
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published
2006
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Classical Liberalism and the Austrian School
6 editions
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published
2012
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Democracy in America - Alexis de Tocqueville
3 editions
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published
1987
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World War I
by
6 editions
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published
2012
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The Spanish-American War/]World War I Part1
by
2 editions
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published
2006
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World War I, Part 2
2 editions
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published
2006
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“(P58) It is curious how, with his stark Darwinian outlook, his elevation of war to the central place in human history, and his racism, as well as his fixation on “great leaders,” Churchill’s worldview resembled that of his antagonist, Hitler.”
― Great Wars And Great Leaders: A Libertarian Rebuttal
― Great Wars And Great Leaders: A Libertarian Rebuttal
“(P170) In his passion to malign moneymaking, Keynes even resorted to calling on psychoanalysis for support. Fascinated like most of the Bloomsbury circle by the work of Sigmund Freud, Keynes valued it above all for the “intuitions” which paralleled his own, especially on the significance of the love of money . In his Treatise on Money, Keynes refers to a passage in a 1908 paper by Freud, in which he writes of the “connections which exist between the complexes of interest in money and of defaecation” and the unconscious “identification of gold with faeces.” This psychoanalytical “finding”— by the man Vladimir Nabokov correctly identified as the Viennese Fraud— permitted Keynes to assert that love of money was condemned not only by religion but by “science” as well.”
― Classical Liberalism and the Austrian School
― Classical Liberalism and the Austrian School
“The nation as such is not a large subject that has needs, that works, practices economy, and consumes. . . . Thus the phenomena of “national economy” . . . are, rather, the results of all the innumerable individual economic efforts in the nation and . . . must also be theoretically interpreted in this light. . . .Whoever wants to understand theoretically the phenomena of “national economy” . . . must for this reason attempt to go back to their true elements, to the singular economies in the nation, and to investigate the laws by which the former are built up from the latter.”
― Classical Liberalism and the Austrian School
― Classical Liberalism and the Austrian School
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