ABSTRACT

Essays in Our Changing Order is the ninth volume in the collected works of America's pre-eminent social scientist. Each volume has a new opening essay, in this case, a comprehensive review of Veblen's works by Scott Bowman that stands by itself as a premier statement. Using an innovative framework, Bowman sees Veblen as concerned with three unifying themes: the dynamic interrelationships between instinct, habits of thought, environment, and social change in human evolution; the essential contradiction between business and industry sustained by the instinctual dominance of pecuniary exploit over workmanlike efficiency; and the role of ideological and animistic thinking in human affairs.

This volume of Veblen's most important studies, published posthumously in 1936, illustrates and embellishes the themes Bowman outlines in a variety of ways, and is remarkable for its contemporanity and literary freshness. Veblen's editor, Leon Ardzrooni, divides the work into three major segments: essays on economics, including the history of the field; miscellaneous papers, which nearly all come to rest on matters of religion and philosophy; and what Ardzrooni calls war essays, which again reveal a very worldly and wise observer of current events and critic of national policies. What is so astonishing is the timeliness of these seemingly time bound concerns: whether dealing with the condition of women, the intellectual contributions of Jews, farm labor and unions, or the meaning of the Bolshevik Revolution, Veblen confronts us with insights into still-unfinished business.

part I|172 pages

Essays in Economics

chapter |18 pages

The Beginnings of Ownership 1

chapter |15 pages

The Barbarian Status of Women 1

chapter |13 pages

The Economic Theory of Woman’s Dress 1

chapter |7 pages

The Army of the Commonweal 1

chapter |10 pages

“The Overproduction Fallacy” 1

chapter |18 pages

Credit and Prices 1

chapter |11 pages

Fisher’s Rate of Interest 1

chapter |25 pages

Fisher’s Capital and Income 1

part II|70 pages

Miscellaneous Papers

chapter |19 pages

Kant’s Critique of Judgment 1

chapter |6 pages

Arts and Crafts 1

chapter |11 pages

An Experiment in Eugenics 1

part III|228 pages

War Essays

chapter |3 pages

Japanese Lose Hope for Germany 1

chapter |19 pages

The Opportunity of Japan 1

chapter |40 pages

Farm Labor for the Period of the War 1

chapter |18 pages

Farm Labor and the I.W.W. 1

chapter |10 pages

The War and Higher Learning 1

chapter |8 pages

The Passing of National Frontiers 1

chapter |8 pages

A Policy of Reconstruction 1

chapter |16 pages

Bolshevism is a Menace—To Whom? 1

chapter |8 pages

Peace 1

chapter |14 pages

Dementia Præcox 1

chapter |13 pages

Between Bolshevism and War 1

chapter |12 pages

Editorials from “the Dial”