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Hermann Heinrich Gossen

Hermann Heinrich Gossen (7 September 1810 – 13 February 1858) was a German economist who is often regarded as the first to elaborate, in detail, a general theory of marginal utility.

Hermann Heinrich Gossen
Born(1810-09-07)7 September 1810
DiedFebruary 13, 1858(1858-02-13) (aged 47)
Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Kingdom of Prussia
NationalityGerman
Academic career
FieldMicroeconomics
Alma materUniversity of Bonn
ContributionsGeneral theory of marginal utility
Gossen's laws

Prior to Gossen, a number of economic theorists, including Gabriel Cramer,[1] Daniel Bernoulli,[2] William Forster Lloyd,[3] Nassau William Senior,[4] and Jules Dupuit[5] had employed or asserted the significance of some notion of marginal utility. But Cramer, Bernoulli, and Dupuit had focussed upon specific problems, Lloyd had not presented any applications of theory, and if Senior provided a detailed elaboration of the general theory he had developed,[6] he had done so in language that caused his applications of theory to be missed by most readers.

Life and family background edit

Hermann Heinrich Gossen was born in Düren, Roer (department) (Roerdépartement, or Département de la Roer), First French Empire.[7] Today that area is known as North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. Hermann died in Cologne (Köln), North Rhine-Westphalia, Prussia. His parents were Georg Joseph Gossen (December 15, 1780 - October 7, 1847) (aka Georg Josef Gossen) and Maria Anna Mechtilde (Mechthildis) Scholl (February 22, 1768 - June 29, 1833). Georg and Maria were married on October 25, 1804 in Aachen.

Hermann's paternal grandfather, Arnold Winand Gossen, married Anna Cordula Schmitz on September 3, 1774 in Selgersdorf, Jülich, Prussia. Arnold Winand Gossen - a Kurfürstlicher steuereintreiber (Electoral tax collector) and Wahlrentenmanager (Electoral pension manager) - was one of the most respected officials operating in the city of Düren, the duchy of Jülich, and other parts of the Lower Rhine region of Prussia. However, beginning in the mid-1790s, Arnold gradually lost his position and income, due to the acquisition by France of Prussian territories where Arnold had ongoing business operations. These acquisitions of Prussian territory by France were a consequence of Prussia's involvement in the French Revolutionary Wars (1792-1802).[8]

Hermann studied at the University of Bonn, then worked in the Prussian administration until retiring in 1847, after which he sold insurance until his death.[9]

Entwickelung der Gesetze des menschlichen Verkehrs (1854) edit

Gossen's book Entwickelung der Gesetze des menschlichen Verkehrs, und der daraus fließenden Regeln für menschliches Handeln (Braunschweig: Druck und Verlag von Friedrich Vieweg und Sohn, 1854) (Development of the Laws of Human Intercourse and the Consequent Rules of Human Action) went through two printings in 1854. In this work, Gossen very explicitly develops general theoretical implications from a theory of marginal utility, to the extent that William Stanley Jevons (one of the preceptors of the Marginal Revolution) was later to remark that

[I]t is quite apparent that Gossen has completely anticipated me as regards the general principles and method of the theory of Economics. So far as I can gather, his treatment of the fundamental theory is even more general and thorough than what I was able to scheme out.[10]

Entwickelung was poorly received, as economic thought in Germany at the time (1854) was dominated by the Historical School, and Gossen had written Entwickelung in a dense, heavily mathematical style, a manner of exposition which was quite unpopular with adherents of the Historical School. Although Gossen himself declared that his work was comparable in its significance to the innovations of Copernicus, few others agreed. Embittered by the work's poor reception, shortly before his death Gossen ordered the destruction of all copies of the book. All unsold copies were pulled from stores by the publisher, who did not destroy them however, but instead put them in storage. About 32 years later, these unsold copies of the book were purchased by Berlin publisher R. L. Prager, who recycled and re-issued them in 1889, under the imprint Verlag von R. L. Prager. Today, only a few copies of the 1854 and 1889 printings of the book still exist.[11]

In the early 1870s, William Stanley Jevons, Carl Menger, and Léon Walras each reintroduced the theory of marginal utility. During discussions in 1878 as to which of those three had been the first to formulate the theory, Robert Adamson (1852-1902), who was a colleague of Jevons at Owens College (Manchester, England), finally discovered a copy of Entwickelung in the British Museum, after trying for several years to locate a copy of the book, which had become unobtainable (and had been ignored and forgotten as well) since being removed from sale in stores by its publisher in late 1857 or early 1858.[12] However, this re-discovery of the book came several years after the three principals in the Marginal Revolution had published their own books, and significant differences with Gossen’s original contributions were overlooked. A century later (1983), Gossen’s book was translated into English.[13] In his introduction to the book, Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen, a prominent American economist (Distinguished Fellow of the American Economics Association), strongly supported Gossen’s vision, which stands in opposition to the neoclassical orthodoxy that utility (satisfaction) is properly identified with consumables in basic (utility) theory rather than consumption activity:

Given that the only certain fact is the intensity of pleasure felt at an instant of time, the only epistemologically sound approach is to take intensity as the primary concept. ([1854] 1983, lxxxi [See "Further reading" below.])

Georgescu-Roegen also extended Gossen’s behavioral formulation by introducing leisure in addition to production and consumption activities.

Gossen was among the first economists to argue that a centrally planned economy was unworkable:[14][15]

Original: " … nur durch Feststellung des Privateigenthums der Maßstab gefunden wird zur Bestimmung der Quantität, welche den Verhältnissen angemessen am Zweckmäßigsten von jeden Gegenstand zu produciren ist. Darum würde denn die von Communisten projectirte Centralbehörde zur Vertheilung der verschiedenen Arbeiten und ihrer Belohnung sehr bald die Erfahrung machen, daß sie sich eine Aufgabe gestellt habe, deren Lösung die Kräfte einzelner Menschen weit übersteigt."

Translation: " ... only through the establishment of private property is to be found the measure for determining the quantity of each commodity which it would be best to produce under given conditions. Therefore, the central authority [that's] proposed by the communists for the distribution of the various tasks and their reward, would very soon find that it had undertaken a task the solution of which far exceeds the abilities of individual men."

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Cramer, Garbriel; letter of 21 May 1728 to Nicolaus Bernoulli (excerpted in PDF 2008-09-09 at the Wayback Machine).
  2. ^ Bernoulli, Daniel (1738). "Specimen theoriae novae de mensura sortis" [Exposition of a new theory on the measurement of risk]. Commentarii Academiae Scientiarum Imperialis Petropolitanae [Memoirs of the Imperial Academy of Science at St. Petersburg] (in Latin and French). 5: 175–192.; English translation: Bernoulli, Daniel (January 1954). "Exposition of a new theory on the measurement of risk". Econometrica. 22 (1): 23–36. doi:10.2307/1909829. JSTOR 1909829. S2CID 9165746.
  3. ^ Lloyd, William Forster; Lectures on Population, Value, Poor Laws and Rent (1837).
  4. ^ Senior, Nassau William (1836). An Outline of the Science of Political Economy. London, England: W. Clowes and Sons.
  5. ^ Dupuit, Jules (1844). "De la mesure de l'utilité des travaux publics" [On the measure of the utility of public works]. Annales des ponts et chaussées (in French). 8 (2): 332–375.
    • English translation: Dupuit, Jules; Barback, R.M., trans. (1952). "On the measure of utility of public works". International Economic Papers. 2: 83–100.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ White, Michael V; “Diamonds Are Forever(?): Nassau Senior and Utility Theory” in The Manchester School of Economic & Social Studies 60 (1992) #1 (March).
  7. ^ In the year Hermann was born (1810), and for a few years thereafter, the city of Düren was part of France. As early as 1794 the city of Düren was occupied by French Revolutionary troops, due to Prussia's involvement in the War of the First Coalition (1792-1797). By the terms of secret clauses of the Treaty of Campo Formio (October 17, 1797), the cities of Düren and Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle) now came under the rulership of the First French Republic (Aachen previously had been a Free Imperial City in the Holy Roman Empire). The Treaty of Campo Formio terminated the War of the First Coalition. Finally, by the Treaty of Lunéville (February 9, 1801), Prussia officially and publicly (not secretly) ceded Düren, Aachen, and the entire west bank of the Rhine River to France. Under both the First French Republic (1792-1804) and the First French Empire (1804-1814), Aachen was the chief city in the French Département de la Roer (Roerdépartement). From 1798-1814 Düren was the main city in the canton Düren in the Aachen arrondissement of the Département de la Roer (Roerdépartement). As one of the provisions of the Congress of Vienna (June 9, 1815), the territory known as the Lower Rhine - which included the French départements Rhin-et-Moselle, Sarre, and Roer - was ceded back to Prussia by France via an agreement with Frederick William III of Prussia (King of Prussia from 1797-1840). On April 16, 1816, these former French départements, now part of the Kingdom of Prussia, were combined to form the Grand Duchy of the Lower Rhine (Grossherzogtum Niederrhein), aka the Lower Rhine Province (Provinz Niederrhein), which King Frederick William III ruled over under his title Grand Duke of the Lower Rhine. On June 22, 1822 a Kabinettsorder (Order of the Prussian Cabinet) united the Grand Duchy of the Lower Rhine (Lower Rhine Province) with the neighboring Province of Jülich-Cleves-Berg - the province immediately to the south of the Lower Rhine Province - to form the Rhine Province.
  8. ^ Arnold's loss of his position and income was due, generally speaking, to the French occupation in western Prussia that was a result of Prussia's involvement in the War of the First Coalition (1792-1797). More specifically, Arnold's losses were due to France's annexation of the west bank of the Rhine River, and to the ceding to France by Prussia of Düren, Aachen, and other Prussian cities and territories where he was very active in business. Arnold's fortunes started to decline rapidly when representatives of France and Prussia signed the first part of the Peace of Basel (1795) on April 6, 1795. A secret article in the Peace of Basel recognized French control of the west bank of the Rhine River - pending approval by members of the Imperial Diet (Holy Roman Empire). A few years later, the Treaty of Campo Formio (October 17, 1797) - the treaty that ended the War of the First Coalition - also contained secret clauses that affected Arnold's fortunes. These secret clauses extended the borders of France up to the Rhine, Nette, and Roer Rivers, again ceded control of the west bank of the Rhine River to France, and additionally ceded control of the cities Düren and Aachen to France, thus expanding the territory of France into areas of Prussia where Arnold had business operations. Finally, by the Treaty of Lunéville (February 9, 1801), Prussia officially and publicly (not secretly this time) ceded areas of the Lower Rhine region (including the cities Düren and Aachen), plus the entire west bank of the Rhine River, to France.
  9. ^ Rutherford, Donald (2002). "Gossen, Hermann Heinrich (1810-1858)". Routledge Dictionary of Economics (2nd ed.). London and New York: Routledge. p. 236 – via Internet Archive.
  10. ^ Jevons, William Stanley (1879). The Theory of Political Economy (2nd ed.). London, England: Macmillan and Co. p. xxxviii.
  11. ^ As the 1982 Nobel prize winner George Stigler reported in his memoirs, a nice copy of the first edition of the book was purchased by his son Stephen Stigler for $25 and presented to him as a present. Another copy of the same book was sold for $15,000 at an auction ten years later. See Stigler, George J. (1988). Memoirs of an Unregulated Economist. New York: Basic Books. p. 217. ISBN 9780226774404.
  12. ^ Jevons, William (1888). "Preface to the Second Edition (1879)". The Theory of Political Economy. p. XXXI.
  13. ^ Gossen, Hermann Heinrich (1983). The Laws of Human Relations, and The Rules of Human Action Derived Therefrom. Translated by Blitz, Rudolph C. Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England: MIT Press – via Internet Archive.
  14. ^ Hermann Heinrich Gossen (1854). Entwickelung der Gesetze des menschlichen Verkehrs, und der daraus fließenden Regeln für menschliches Handeln [Development of the laws of human intercourse, and the rules following therefrom for human action]. Braunschweig, (Germany): Friedrich Vieweg und Sohn. p. 231., as cited in: Mises, Ludwig von (2016). Die Gemeinwirtschaft: Untersuchungen über den Sozialismus (Unveränderter Nachdruck der 2., umgearbeiteten Auflage, Jena 1932, mit einem Vorwort von Theo Müller und Harald Freiherr v. Seefried). De Gruyter Oldenbourg. pp. 114–115. doi:10.1515/9783110504705.; Mises, Ludwig von (1951). Socialism: An Economic and Sociological Analysis. Translated by Kahane J. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 135 – via Internet Archive.
  15. ^ Hayek, F. A. (1935). "The Nature and History of the Problem". Collectivist Economic Planning. London: Routledge. p. 26 – via Internet Archive.

Further reading edit

  • Bagiotti, Tullio (1955). "NEL CENTENNALE DEL LIBRO DI GOSSEN". Giornale degli Economisti e Annali di Economia (in Italian). 14 (5–6): 237–253. JSTOR 23236517.
  • Black, R. D. Collison; Coats, A. W.; Goodwin, Craufurd D. W., eds. (1973). The Marginal Revolution in Economics. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. pp. 6, 8, 9, 11, 25, 108, 173, 193, 206, 257, 270, 271, 273, 323.
  • Blaug, Mark, ed. (1986). "Gossen, Herman Heinrich". Who's Who in Economics: A Biographical Dictionary of Major Economists 1700-1986 (2nd ed.). Wheatsheaf Books Limited lo. p. 329 – via Internet Archive.
  • Bousquet, G. H. (1958). "Un Centenaire: L'œuvre de H. H. Gossen (1810-1858) et Sa Véritable Structure". Revue d'économie politique (in French). 68 (3): 499–523. JSTOR 24691148.
  • Edgeworth, Francis Y. (1906). "Gossen, Hermann Heinrich (1810-1957)". In Palgrave, R. H. Inglis (ed.). Dictionary of Political Economy. Vol. 2 (F-M). London: Macmillan. pp. 231-233 – via Internet Archive.
  • Georgescu-Roegen, Nicholas (1983). "Hermann Heinrich Gossen: His Life and Work in Historical Perspective". The Laws of Human Relations, and The Rules of Human Action Derived Therefrom. Translated by Blitz, Rudolph C. Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England: MIT Press. pp. xi - cxiv. ISBN 0-262-07090-1 – via Internet Archive.
  • Gossen, Hermann Heinrich (1854). Entwickelung der Gesetze des menschlichen Verkehrs, und der daraus fließenden Regeln für menschliches Handeln. Braunschweig: Friedrich Vieweg und Sohn – via Internet Archive. Translated into English as Gossen, Hermann Heinrich (1983). The Laws of Human Relations, and The Rules of Human Action Derived Therefrom. Translated by Blitz, Rudolph C. Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England: MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-07090-1 – via Internet Archive.
  • Klaus Hagendorf: A Critique of Gossen's Fundamental Theorem of the Theory of Pleasure
  • Hayek, Friedrich A. (1937). "Gossen, Hermann Heinrich". In Seligman, Edwin R. A. (ed.). International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. Vol. 7. New York: The Macmillan Company. p. 3 – via Internet Archive.
  • Hayek, Friedrich A. (1988). Bartley III, W.W. (ed.). The Fatal Conceit: The Errors of Socialism (The Collected Works of F. A. Hayek). Vol. 1. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press and Routledge. pp. 87, 149 – via Internet Archive.
  • Hayek, Friedrich A. (1991). "Hermann Heinrich Gossen". In Bartley III, W.W.; Kresge, Stephen (eds.). The Trend of Economic Thinking (The Collected Works of F. A. Hayek). Vol. 3. Translated by Ralph Raico. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press and Routledge. pp. 352- 371 – via Internet Archive.
  • Ikeda, Yukihiro (2000). "Hermann Heinrich Gossen: a Wirkungsgeschichte of an ignored mathematical economist". Journal of Economic Studies. 27 (4/5): 394–415. doi:10.1108/01443580010342285.
  • Jevons, William Stanley (1886). His Wife (ed.). Letters & Journal of W. Stanley Jevons. London: Macmillan and Co. pp. 387, 389, 390, 409, 431 – via Internet Archive.
  • Jevons, William Stanley (1977). R. D. Collison Black (ed.). Papers and Correspondence of William Stanley Jevons. Vol. V (Correspondence 1879-1882). London: The Macmillan Press Limited. pp. 21, 22, 56, 61, 80, 95, 96, 97, 144, 145, 152 – via Internet Archive.
  • Kauder, Emil (1965). A History of the Marginal Utility Theory. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 42–51. doi:10.1515/9781400877744.
  • Kurz, Heinz D. (2016). "Gossen, Hermann Heinrich". In Faccarello, Gilbert; Kurz, Heinz D. (eds.). Handbook on the History of Economic Analysis. Vol. 1 (Great Economists since Petty and Boisguilbert). Cheltenham, UK and Northhampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. 194–202. doi:10.4337/9781785366642.
  • Mahr, Alexander. "Gossen, Hermann Heinrich" (in German). Deutsche Biographie. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
  • Niehans, Jürg (2008). "Gossen, Hermann Heinrich". The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 1–5. doi:10.1057/978-1-349-95121-5_811-2.
  • Schumpeter, Joseph A. (1954). Elizabeth Boody Schumpeter (ed.). History of Economic Analysis. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 303, 463, 910–911, 913, 915, 919, 923, 956, 1054, 1056, 1066, 1069, 1176 – via Internet Archive.
  • Spiegel, Henry W. (1968). "Gossen, Hermann Heinrich". In Sills, David L. (ed.). International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. Vol. 6. The Macmillan Company & The Free Press. pp. 209-210 – via Internet Archive.
  • Stark, Werner (1976). The Ideal Foundations of Economic Thought. Fairfield: Augustus M. Kelley. pp. 149- – via Internet Archive.
  • Walras, Leon (1885). "UNE ÉCONOMISTE INCONNUE: Hermann-Henry Gossen". Journal des Économistes. 44. Paris: 68- 90 – via Gallica.
  • Walras, Leon (1952). "Walras on Gossen". In Spiegel, Henry William (ed.). The Development of Economic Thought: Great Economists in Perspective. New York and London: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.; Chapman & Hall, Limited. pp. 470- 488 – via Internet Archive.

External links edit

  • Streeck, Nina. "Hermann Heinrich Gossen, Nationalökonom (1810-1858)" (in German). Internetportal Rheinische Geschichte. Retrieved 25 November 2023.
  • Works by or about Hermann Heinrich Gossen at Internet Archive

hermann, heinrich, gossen, september, 1810, february, 1858, german, economist, often, regarded, first, elaborate, detail, general, theory, marginal, utility, born, 1810, september, 1810düren, north, rhine, westphalia, first, french, empirediedfebruary, 1858, 1. Hermann Heinrich Gossen 7 September 1810 13 February 1858 was a German economist who is often regarded as the first to elaborate in detail a general theory of marginal utility Hermann Heinrich GossenBorn 1810 09 07 7 September 1810Duren North Rhine Westphalia First French EmpireDiedFebruary 13 1858 1858 02 13 aged 47 Cologne North Rhine Westphalia Kingdom of PrussiaNationalityGermanAcademic careerFieldMicroeconomicsAlma materUniversity of BonnContributionsGeneral theory of marginal utilityGossen s lawsPrior to Gossen a number of economic theorists including Gabriel Cramer 1 Daniel Bernoulli 2 William Forster Lloyd 3 Nassau William Senior 4 and Jules Dupuit 5 had employed or asserted the significance of some notion of marginal utility But Cramer Bernoulli and Dupuit had focussed upon specific problems Lloyd had not presented any applications of theory and if Senior provided a detailed elaboration of the general theory he had developed 6 he had done so in language that caused his applications of theory to be missed by most readers Contents 1 Life and family background 2 Entwickelung der Gesetze des menschlichen Verkehrs 1854 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksLife and family background editHermann Heinrich Gossen was born in Duren Roer department Roerdepartement or Departement de la Roer First French Empire 7 Today that area is known as North Rhine Westphalia Germany Hermann died in Cologne Koln North Rhine Westphalia Prussia His parents were Georg Joseph Gossen December 15 1780 October 7 1847 aka Georg Josef Gossen and Maria Anna Mechtilde Mechthildis Scholl February 22 1768 June 29 1833 Georg and Maria were married on October 25 1804 in Aachen Hermann s paternal grandfather Arnold Winand Gossen married Anna Cordula Schmitz on September 3 1774 in Selgersdorf Julich Prussia Arnold Winand Gossen a Kurfurstlicher steuereintreiber Electoral tax collector and Wahlrentenmanager Electoral pension manager was one of the most respected officials operating in the city of Duren the duchy of Julich and other parts of the Lower Rhine region of Prussia However beginning in the mid 1790s Arnold gradually lost his position and income due to the acquisition by France of Prussian territories where Arnold had ongoing business operations These acquisitions of Prussian territory by France were a consequence of Prussia s involvement in the French Revolutionary Wars 1792 1802 8 Hermann studied at the University of Bonn then worked in the Prussian administration until retiring in 1847 after which he sold insurance until his death 9 Entwickelung der Gesetze des menschlichen Verkehrs 1854 editGossen s book Entwickelung der Gesetze des menschlichen Verkehrs und der daraus fliessenden Regeln fur menschliches Handeln Braunschweig Druck und Verlag von Friedrich Vieweg und Sohn 1854 Development of the Laws of Human Intercourse and the Consequent Rules of Human Action went through two printings in 1854 In this work Gossen very explicitly develops general theoretical implications from a theory of marginal utility to the extent that William Stanley Jevons one of the preceptors of the Marginal Revolution was later to remark that I t is quite apparent that Gossen has completely anticipated me as regards the general principles and method of the theory of Economics So far as I can gather his treatment of the fundamental theory is even more general and thorough than what I was able to scheme out 10 Entwickelung was poorly received as economic thought in Germany at the time 1854 was dominated by the Historical School and Gossen had written Entwickelung in a dense heavily mathematical style a manner of exposition which was quite unpopular with adherents of the Historical School Although Gossen himself declared that his work was comparable in its significance to the innovations of Copernicus few others agreed Embittered by the work s poor reception shortly before his death Gossen ordered the destruction of all copies of the book All unsold copies were pulled from stores by the publisher who did not destroy them however but instead put them in storage About 32 years later these unsold copies of the book were purchased by Berlin publisher R L Prager who recycled and re issued them in 1889 under the imprint Verlag von R L Prager Today only a few copies of the 1854 and 1889 printings of the book still exist 11 In the early 1870s William Stanley Jevons Carl Menger and Leon Walras each reintroduced the theory of marginal utility During discussions in 1878 as to which of those three had been the first to formulate the theory Robert Adamson 1852 1902 who was a colleague of Jevons at Owens College Manchester England finally discovered a copy of Entwickelung in the British Museum after trying for several years to locate a copy of the book which had become unobtainable and had been ignored and forgotten as well since being removed from sale in stores by its publisher in late 1857 or early 1858 12 However this re discovery of the book came several years after the three principals in the Marginal Revolution had published their own books and significant differences with Gossen s original contributions were overlooked A century later 1983 Gossen s book was translated into English 13 In his introduction to the book Nicholas Georgescu Roegen a prominent American economist Distinguished Fellow of the American Economics Association strongly supported Gossen s vision which stands in opposition to the neoclassical orthodoxy that utility satisfaction is properly identified with consumables in basic utility theory rather than consumption activity Given that the only certain fact is the intensity of pleasure felt at an instant of time the only epistemologically sound approach is to take intensity as the primary concept 1854 1983 lxxxi See Further reading below Georgescu Roegen also extended Gossen s behavioral formulation by introducing leisure in addition to production and consumption activities Gossen was among the first economists to argue that a centrally planned economy was unworkable 14 15 Original nur durch Feststellung des Privateigenthums der Massstab gefunden wird zur Bestimmung der Quantitat welche den Verhaltnissen angemessen am Zweckmassigsten von jeden Gegenstand zu produciren ist Darum wurde denn die von Communisten projectirte Centralbehorde zur Vertheilung der verschiedenen Arbeiten und ihrer Belohnung sehr bald die Erfahrung machen dass sie sich eine Aufgabe gestellt habe deren Losung die Krafte einzelner Menschen weit ubersteigt Translation only through the establishment of private property is to be found the measure for determining the quantity of each commodity which it would be best to produce under given conditions Therefore the central authority that s proposed by the communists for the distribution of the various tasks and their reward would very soon find that it had undertaken a task the solution of which far exceeds the abilities of individual men See also editScarcity MarginalismReferences edit Cramer Garbriel letter of 21 May 1728 to Nicolaus Bernoulli excerpted in PDF Archived 2008 09 09 at the Wayback Machine Bernoulli Daniel 1738 Specimen theoriae novae de mensura sortis Exposition of a new theory on the measurement of risk Commentarii Academiae Scientiarum Imperialis Petropolitanae Memoirs of the Imperial Academy of Science at St Petersburg in Latin and French 5 175 192 English translation Bernoulli Daniel January 1954 Exposition of a new theory on the measurement of risk Econometrica 22 1 23 36 doi 10 2307 1909829 JSTOR 1909829 S2CID 9165746 Lloyd William Forster Lectures on Population Value Poor Laws and Rent 1837 Senior Nassau William 1836 An Outline of the Science of Political Economy London England W Clowes and Sons Dupuit Jules 1844 De la mesure de l utilite des travaux publics On the measure of the utility of public works Annales des ponts et chaussees in French 8 2 332 375 English translation Dupuit Jules Barback R M trans 1952 On the measure of utility of public works International Economic Papers 2 83 100 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link White Michael V Diamonds Are Forever Nassau Senior and Utility Theory in The Manchester School of Economic amp Social Studies 60 1992 1 March In the year Hermann was born 1810 and for a few years thereafter the city of Duren was part of France As early as 1794 the city of Duren was occupied by French Revolutionary troops due to Prussia s involvement in the War of the First Coalition 1792 1797 By the terms of secret clauses of the Treaty of Campo Formio October 17 1797 the cities of Duren and Aachen Aix la Chapelle now came under the rulership of the First French Republic Aachen previously had been a Free Imperial City in the Holy Roman Empire The Treaty of Campo Formio terminated the War of the First Coalition Finally by the Treaty of Luneville February 9 1801 Prussia officially and publicly not secretly ceded Duren Aachen and the entire west bank of the Rhine River to France Under both the First French Republic 1792 1804 and the First French Empire 1804 1814 Aachen was the chief city in the French Departement de la Roer Roerdepartement From 1798 1814 Duren was the main city in the canton Duren in the Aachen arrondissement of the Departement de la Roer Roerdepartement As one of the provisions of the Congress of Vienna June 9 1815 the territory known as the Lower Rhine which included the French departements Rhin et Moselle Sarre and Roer was ceded back to Prussia by France via an agreement with Frederick William III of Prussia King of Prussia from 1797 1840 On April 16 1816 these former French departements now part of the Kingdom of Prussia were combined to form the Grand Duchy of the Lower Rhine Grossherzogtum Niederrhein aka the Lower Rhine Province Provinz Niederrhein which King Frederick William III ruled over under his title Grand Duke of the Lower Rhine On June 22 1822 a Kabinettsorder Order of the Prussian Cabinet united the Grand Duchy of the Lower Rhine Lower Rhine Province with the neighboring Province of Julich Cleves Berg the province immediately to the south of the Lower Rhine Province to form the Rhine Province Arnold s loss of his position and income was due generally speaking to the French occupation in western Prussia that was a result of Prussia s involvement in the War of the First Coalition 1792 1797 More specifically Arnold s losses were due to France s annexation of the west bank of the Rhine River and to the ceding to France by Prussia of Duren Aachen and other Prussian cities and territories where he was very active in business Arnold s fortunes started to decline rapidly when representatives of France and Prussia signed the first part of the Peace of Basel 1795 on April 6 1795 A secret article in the Peace of Basel recognized French control of the west bank of the Rhine River pending approval by members of the Imperial Diet Holy Roman Empire A few years later the Treaty of Campo Formio October 17 1797 the treaty that ended the War of the First Coalition also contained secret clauses that affected Arnold s fortunes These secret clauses extended the borders of France up to the Rhine Nette and Roer Rivers again ceded control of the west bank of the Rhine River to France and additionally ceded control of the cities Duren and Aachen to France thus expanding the territory of France into areas of Prussia where Arnold had business operations Finally by the Treaty of Luneville February 9 1801 Prussia officially and publicly not secretly this time ceded areas of the Lower Rhine region including the cities Duren and Aachen plus the entire west bank of the Rhine River to France Rutherford Donald 2002 Gossen Hermann Heinrich 1810 1858 Routledge Dictionary of Economics 2nd ed London and New York Routledge p 236 via Internet Archive Jevons William Stanley 1879 The Theory of Political Economy 2nd ed London England Macmillan and Co p xxxviii As the 1982 Nobel prize winner George Stigler reported in his memoirs a nice copy of the first edition of the book was purchased by his son Stephen Stigler for 25 and presented to him as a present Another copy of the same book was sold for 15 000 at an auction ten years later See Stigler George J 1988 Memoirs of an Unregulated Economist New York Basic Books p 217 ISBN 9780226774404 Jevons William 1888 Preface to the Second Edition 1879 The Theory of Political Economy p XXXI Gossen Hermann Heinrich 1983 The Laws of Human Relations and The Rules of Human Action Derived Therefrom Translated by Blitz Rudolph C Cambridge Massachusetts and London England MIT Press via Internet Archive Hermann Heinrich Gossen 1854 Entwickelung der Gesetze des menschlichen Verkehrs und der daraus fliessenden Regeln fur menschliches Handeln Development of the laws of human intercourse and the rules following therefrom for human action Braunschweig Germany Friedrich Vieweg und Sohn p 231 as cited in Mises Ludwig von 2016 Die Gemeinwirtschaft Untersuchungen uber den Sozialismus Unveranderter Nachdruck der 2 umgearbeiteten Auflage Jena 1932 mit einem Vorwort von Theo Muller und Harald Freiherr v Seefried De Gruyter Oldenbourg pp 114 115 doi 10 1515 9783110504705 Mises Ludwig von 1951 Socialism An Economic and Sociological Analysis Translated by Kahane J New Haven Yale University Press p 135 via Internet Archive Hayek F A 1935 The Nature and History of the Problem Collectivist Economic Planning London Routledge p 26 via Internet Archive Further reading editBagiotti Tullio 1955 NEL CENTENNALE DEL LIBRO DI GOSSEN Giornale degli Economisti e Annali di Economia in Italian 14 5 6 237 253 JSTOR 23236517 Black R D Collison Coats A W Goodwin Craufurd D W eds 1973 The Marginal Revolution in Economics Durham NC Duke University Press pp 6 8 9 11 25 108 173 193 206 257 270 271 273 323 Blaug Mark ed 1986 Gossen Herman Heinrich Who s Who in Economics A Biographical Dictionary of Major Economists 1700 1986 2nd ed Wheatsheaf Books Limited lo p 329 via Internet Archive Bousquet G H 1958 Un Centenaire L œuvre de H H Gossen 1810 1858 et Sa Veritable Structure Revue d economie politique in French 68 3 499 523 JSTOR 24691148 Edgeworth Francis Y 1906 Gossen Hermann Heinrich 1810 1957 In Palgrave R H Inglis ed Dictionary of Political Economy Vol 2 F M London Macmillan pp 231 233 via Internet Archive Georgescu Roegen Nicholas 1983 Hermann Heinrich Gossen His Life and Work in Historical Perspective The Laws of Human Relations and The Rules of Human Action Derived Therefrom Translated by Blitz Rudolph C Cambridge Massachusetts and London England MIT Press pp xi cxiv ISBN 0 262 07090 1 via Internet Archive Gossen Hermann Heinrich 1854 Entwickelung der Gesetze des menschlichen Verkehrs und der daraus fliessenden Regeln fur menschliches Handeln Braunschweig Friedrich Vieweg und Sohn via Internet Archive Translated into English as Gossen Hermann Heinrich 1983 The Laws of Human Relations and The Rules of Human Action Derived Therefrom Translated by Blitz Rudolph C Cambridge Massachusetts and London England MIT Press ISBN 0 262 07090 1 via Internet Archive Klaus Hagendorf A Critique of Gossen s Fundamental Theorem of the Theory of Pleasure Hayek Friedrich A 1937 Gossen Hermann Heinrich In Seligman Edwin R A ed International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences Vol 7 New York The Macmillan Company p 3 via Internet Archive Hayek Friedrich A 1988 Bartley III W W ed The Fatal Conceit The Errors of Socialism The Collected Works of F A Hayek Vol 1 Chicago and London The University of Chicago Press and Routledge pp 87 149 via Internet Archive Hayek Friedrich A 1991 Hermann Heinrich Gossen In Bartley III W W Kresge Stephen eds The Trend of Economic Thinking The Collected Works of F A Hayek Vol 3 Translated by Ralph Raico Chicago and London The University of Chicago Press and Routledge pp 352 371 via Internet Archive Ikeda Yukihiro 2000 Hermann Heinrich Gossen a Wirkungsgeschichte of an ignored mathematical economist Journal of Economic Studies 27 4 5 394 415 doi 10 1108 01443580010342285 Jevons William Stanley 1886 His Wife ed Letters amp Journal of W Stanley Jevons London Macmillan and Co pp 387 389 390 409 431 via Internet Archive Jevons William Stanley 1977 R D Collison Black ed Papers and Correspondence of William Stanley Jevons Vol V Correspondence 1879 1882 London The Macmillan Press Limited pp 21 22 56 61 80 95 96 97 144 145 152 via Internet Archive Kauder Emil 1965 A History of the Marginal Utility Theory Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 42 51 doi 10 1515 9781400877744 Kurz Heinz D 2016 Gossen Hermann Heinrich In Faccarello Gilbert Kurz Heinz D eds Handbook on the History of Economic Analysis Vol 1 Great Economists since Petty and Boisguilbert Cheltenham UK and Northhampton MA USA Edward Elgar Publishing pp 194 202 doi 10 4337 9781785366642 Mahr Alexander Gossen Hermann Heinrich in German Deutsche Biographie Retrieved 23 November 2023 Niehans Jurg 2008 Gossen Hermann Heinrich The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics London Palgrave Macmillan pp 1 5 doi 10 1057 978 1 349 95121 5 811 2 Schumpeter Joseph A 1954 Elizabeth Boody Schumpeter ed History of Economic Analysis New York Oxford University Press pp 303 463 910 911 913 915 919 923 956 1054 1056 1066 1069 1176 via Internet Archive Spiegel Henry W 1968 Gossen Hermann Heinrich In Sills David L ed International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences Vol 6 The Macmillan Company amp The Free Press pp 209 210 via Internet Archive Stark Werner 1976 The Ideal Foundations of Economic Thought Fairfield Augustus M Kelley pp 149 via Internet Archive Walras Leon 1885 UNE ECONOMISTE INCONNUE Hermann Henry Gossen Journal des Economistes 44 Paris 68 90 via Gallica Walras Leon 1952 Walras on Gossen In Spiegel Henry William ed The Development of Economic Thought Great Economists in Perspective New York and London John Wiley amp Sons Inc Chapman amp Hall Limited pp 470 488 via Internet Archive External links editStreeck Nina Hermann Heinrich Gossen Nationalokonom 1810 1858 in German Internetportal Rheinische Geschichte Retrieved 25 November 2023 Works by or about Hermann Heinrich Gossen at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hermann Heinrich Gossen amp oldid 1208214137, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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