
Source: 1980s, Notes on an epistemology for living things, 1981, p.258
Introduction, p. vii
Economic Heresies (1971)
Source: 1980s, Notes on an epistemology for living things, 1981, p.258
Gold and Economic Freedom http://www.constitution.org/mon/greenspan_gold.htm 1966
1950–60s
‘Introduction’, New Fabian Essays (1952), pp. 26–27
Speech to the National Labour conference at Caxton Hall, London (28 October 1935), quoted in The Times (29 October 1935), p. 9
1930s
Source: A History of Economic Thought (1939), Chapter VII, The Transition, p. 357
Introduction : The Libertarian Tradition http://www.bopsecrets.org/rexroth/communalism1.htm
Communalism (1974)
Context: Prior to 1918 the word “communism” did not mean Left Social Democracy of the sort represented by the Russian Bolsheviks, a radical, revolutionary form of State socialism. Quite the contrary, it was used of those who wished in one way or another to abolish the State, who believed that socialism was not a matter of seizing power, but of doing away with power and returning society to an organic community of non-coercive human relations. They believed that this was what society was naturally, and that the State was only a morbid growth on the normal body of oeconomia, the housekeeping of the human family, grouped in voluntary association. Even the word “socialism” itself was originally applied to the free communist communities which were so common in America in the nineteenth century.
Letter to George Washington (31 October 1776)
Source: 1940s, The Economics of Peace, 1945, p. 239