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  1. Rudy van Zijp: Lachmann and the wilderness: on Lachmann’s radical subjectivism. In: The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought. Herbst, 1995, S. 412–133, doi: 10.1080/09672569508538576. Weblinks. Literatur von und über Ludwig Lachmann im Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek; Biografie (englisch)

  2. Ludwig Maurits Lachmann (/ ˈ l ɑː x m ən /; German:; 1 February 1906 – 17 December 1990) was a German economist, economic theorist and important contributor to the Austrian School of Economics. Lachmann, Israel Kirzner , and Murray Rothbard were the three primary catalysts of the Austrian 'revival', beginning in 1974.

  3. From the mid-1970s until his death in 1990, Ludwig Lachmann played a central role in reinvigorating interest in the Austrian School as a viable alternative to the reigning neoclassical approach to economic analysis. He, along with Murray Rothbard and Israel Kirzner, helped foster a revival that continues to this day and owes much to Lachmann’s […]

  4. 25. März 2024 · From the mid-1970s until his death in 1990, Ludwig Lachmann played a central role in reinvigorating interest in the Austrian School as a viable alternative to the reigning neoclassical approach to economic analysis. He, along with Murray Rothbard and Israel Kirzner, helped foster a revival that continues to this day and owes much to Lachmann’s […]

  5. 23. Aug. 2021 · This article analyzes the evolution of the thought of one of the leading economists of the Austrian school of economics, Ludwig Lachmann. We interpret that evolution, marked by his progressive skepticism about the effectiveness of the price system as part of the learning mechanism in markets, with the aid of a version of evolutionary epistemology. We argue that Lachmann´s earlier work on ...

    • Fabio Barbieri
    • fbarbieri@usp.br
    • 2021
  6. Ludwig M. Lachmann was born in Berlin in 1906 and died in Johannesburg in 1990. For more than forty years, until his retirement in 1972, Lachmann established himself as a prominent South African economist and for a time served as head of the economics department at the University of Witwatersrand. From 1974 to 1987, he worked with Professor ...

  7. 25. Dez. 2023 · Ludwig Lachmann is a central but underappreciated figure within the Austrian school of economics. Although his understanding of institutions, his appreciation of the heterogeneity of capital, his emphasis on subjectivity, and his focus on the dynamism and uncertainty of the real world have become dominant positions amongst Austrian economists, he is still viewed as something of an outsider.