I would like to compliment and complement Salzano's excellent reference to Knight. The essence of Knight's view is that in order to best comprehend the inner workings of the economic system, one should adopt what Knight somewhat inaccurately calls "the producer's point of view." What he is really referring to is the /entrepreneur point of view/, which he had explored so well in his /Risk, Uncertainty and Profit/. That this is so is evidenced by his use of the term "entrepreneur" in this passage. The reason he gives for believing that the economic system is best comprehended from this point of view is based on the idea that the goal of economics (as distinguished from ethics or some broader interest) is to understand entrepreneurs' (producers') adjustments to changes in consumer valuations and to other changes. This point of view was prevalent at the time due mainly to the work of one of his teachers, Davenport (/Economics of Enterprise/ 1914). In short, one understands the economic system if he approaches it from the entrepreneur point of view. And this is most directly accomplished by building images of the system in which subjective sacrifices are separated from the calculations and plans of entrepreneurship that are made in terms in money opportunity costs. This reversal of axes goes to the heart of the distinction between economics as a study of entrepreneurial adjustments (and innovation -- see below) and economics as an experimental science that employs mathematical models. The mathematics of demand and supply is equivalent regardless of how the axes are depicted; but only one procedure helps one target the distinctly human element. And it is this distinctly human element that enables human beings to make progress in the satisfaction of wants which is far beyond that of the non-human animals. Knight deals with innovation in his capital theory (see "Diminishing Returns from Investment" (1944)). The key to understanding his capital theory, which has caused massive confusion among "Knightian scholars," is this same notion -- that the goal of economics is to isolate entrepreneurship and to study its calculation and planning. In capital theory, Knight targets the inherent unpredictability (in terms of numbers) of entrepreneurial inventiveness and its effects. At the same time, he notes that its substantial contribution to economic growth is factually undeniable and that the contribution is partly due to its external effects. The external effects are largely in the form of diffusion of technology, although Knight does not think of technology in the formal sense of changes in quantifiable methods of production. Unlike the passage quoted by Salzano, Knight habitually presents his capital theory by using the term "producer," but not "entrepreneur." The exception is his 1944 paper. This terminological choice is undoubtedly responsible for the massive confusion. The idea of innovation is present in his earlier articles on capital and interest. However, his choice of terminology has led scholars to either disregard them or dismiss them. Pat Gunning