David Hart's Web Page |
Email: dmhart@mac.com |
Updated: October 28, 2003 |
Ludwif von Mises (1881-1973)
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"Liberalism was never permitted to come to full fruition"
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"The philosophers, sociologists, and economists of the eighteenth
and the early part of the nineteenth century formulated a political
program that served as a guide to social policy first in England and
the United States, then on the European continent, and finally in other
parts of the inhabited world as well. Nowhere was this program ever
completely carried out. Even in England, which has been called the homeland
of liberalism and the model liberal country, the proponents of liberal
policies never succeeded in winning all their demands. In the rest of
the world only parts of the liberal program were adopted, while others,
no less important, were either rejected from the very first or discarded
after a short time. Only with some exaggeration can one say that the
world once lived through a liberal era. Liberalism was never permitted
to come to full fruition. Ludwig von Mises, Liberalism: A Socio-Economic Exposition (1927), p. 1. |