There are two works by Roderick Long that may help. One was in the Review of Austrian Economics and the other is a full-length manuscript available online.

Long, R. T. (2004). Anti-psychologism in economics: Wittgenstein and Mises. The Review of Austrian Economics17(4), 345-369.

http://www.libertarianstudies.org/journals/scholar/long.pdf



On Fri, Apr 23, 2021 at 7:58 AM Rob Tye <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Dear Prof Fucidji,

What I have to offer is very much a “hint”

It is my ever abiding reaction to reading the Hacohen biography of the young Karl Popper maybe 15 years ago. 

The scene is the Hayek morning room sometime in the early 1930’s. Mrs Hayek is quietly reading the morning papers.  Mr Hayek bursts into the room, shouting, and stamping his foot.

Hayek > It’s not fair!  Keynes has got a pet philosopher!  I want one!

Rob Tye

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dear collegues,

I need a hint to references on the relationship between Ludwig Wittgenstein and the economists (cross influences, mostly). I have a dozen of papers and the book by John Coates (1996), but it is not enough for launching a research.

I am very grateful for any help.

Best regards,

José Ricardo Fucidji
Professor of EconomicsUniversity of Campinas, Brazil(19) 3521-5743


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