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Source link: http://blog.mises.org/5119/the-study-guide-to-rothbards-treatise/

The Study Guide to Rothbard’s Treatise

June 1, 2006 by

The prose of Man, Economy, and State by Murray Rothbard is as clear as a bell. But its sheer size (1441 pages!) is intimidating. After all, Rothbard systematically covers the whole of economic science.

The young and brilliant economist Robert Murphy has come to the rescue!

In writing the Study Guide to Man, Economy, and State, he had his students in mind. He wanted to design a great teaching tool, one that would reach students the same way a private tutor would. He wanted to help Rothbard’s magnum opus have permanent impact on their thinking.

He accomplished his goal! The guide provides a roadmap to this massive book, complete with summaries, technical notes, annotations of key contributions, and study questions. He puts it all into a manageable size, with 12 pages per chapter of the Scholar’s Edition (which includes both Man, Economy, and State and Power and Market).

To write a guide of this sort is harder than it looks. Murphy first had to master the material in every way, enough so that he could write short, 3-page summaries of the chapters.

He then used his advanced training to discuss and elaborate some of the more technically difficult sections of the book. And because Rothbard does not often explain what is innovative in his own theories, Murphy draws attention to the unique contributions to economic science found herein. He tops if off with a series of thought-provoking questions that deal with the core lessons of each chapter.

The study guide comes spiral bound for ease of use. It also comes with a CD in the back cover that provides a complete edition of the book and guide. That way you can carry the guide with you on trips and study economics on your laptop, even without an internet connection.

Murphy spent more than a year writing and editing it. As you will see, he is an excellent teacher and he set out to do this in a way that appeals to students of all ages.

One of the goals of the Mises Institute has long been to make this book accessible to everyone, particularly people who are studying economics, and especially those who are interested in Austrian economics. This powerful guide makes the text open up as never before.

It is ideal for classroom use, and also for private study. Another use didn’t occur to the author until after he finished it: he uses it to prepare lectures for class! He says now that he doesn’t know how he taught without it before.

Murphy sought to write a teaching guide but he ended up writing a manual to Man, Economy, and State that will quickly become a staple of the literature. Would that every book of this size had such a guide (and, yes, he is working on one for Human Action too!), and would that every guide were as clear and useful as this one.

Professor Murphy is an extraordinary talent with a great gift for helping students understand economics. Now he can be your teacher too.

255 pages, spiral bound softcover, with CD.

{ 4 comments }

Kenneth R. Gregg June 1, 2006 at 4:11 pm

Good! What a wonderful achievement.
There’ve been times when I thought it would be feasible to set MES into a logically-structured diagram, and now Dr. Murphy has accomplished it!
Best to all of you!

M E Hoffer June 1, 2006 at 8:03 pm

Who’s sleeping @ vMI ??

Here’s a Study Guide, offered alone, but not in tandem.

Before, y’all covered 6 books “”essential” to one’s Library”, yet offered no 6-pack.

How ’bout it?

jeffrey June 1, 2006 at 10:28 pm

You don’t think those group products get confusing? Maybe not. We’ll see what we can do.

Dennis Sperduto June 7, 2006 at 7:52 am

Many thanks to Professor Murphy and the Mises Institute for another excellent publication.

Has the Mises Institute considered a similar project regarding Mises’ “Human Action”? Given what I will call the historical and especially philosophical “overlay” of “Human Action”, it could be argued that a study guide is even more needed than one is for “Man, Economy, and State”. I have found Percy Greaves “Mises Made Easier” to be outstanding, but this book is in the form of a dictionary and not a chapter-by-chapter study guide.

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