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Intro
Foreword by Prof. Dr. h.c. Erwin Teufel
Preface
Contents
1 Biographical Outline of List's Life and Work
Note
2 The Systematic Positioning of List's Economic Theory
2.1 The Almost Forgotten German Classic Writings on Political Economy
2.2 Marx, Smith-or List?
2.3 The Significance of Philosophy in Friedrich List's Theory of the State and the Economy
2.4 Political World View
2.5 The Link Between Theory and Practice
2.6 Didactic Principles
Notes
3 The Distinction Between List's Economic Theory and Other Economic Systems

3.1 Differentiation from the Physiocrats
3.2 The Distance to Free Trade and Liberalism
3.3 The Rejection of Socialism
3.4 The Conclusion: The Basic Idea of the Social Market Economy
Notes
4 Friedrich List-Mastermind of the Social Market Economy
4.1 Historical Roots
4.2 The Term "Social Market Economy"
4.3 Examples of Friedrich List's Social Conscience
4.4 Characteristic Features of the Social Market Economy and Their Theoretical Equivalent in Friedrich List's Work
4.5 The "Magic Hexagon" of the Social Market Economy

4.6 Recent Empirical Findings on the Success Model of the Social Market Economy
Notes
5 Ethical Roots of List's Economic Theory
5.1 The Philosophy of the Enlightenment, in Particular Human and Civil Rights
5.2 The Seven Deadly Sins of Economics from the Point of View of Friedrich List
Notes
6 Plea to Mix Different Ethnic Groups
Notes
7 The Morning Star of Civil Liberty
7.1 Natural and Civil Liberty
7.2 The Oppression of Württemberg's Subjects in the First Third of the Nineteenth Century
7.3 Citizen Versus Master Conceit
7.4 Through Prosperity to Freedom

7.5 Freedom of Trade and Free Trade
7.6 Concluding Remarks
Notes
8 War and Peace
8.1 The So-Called "Martial Law"
8.2 The Utopia of Eternal Peace
8.3 List's Utopia Concerning the Military Deterrence of Railways
8.4 The Outlawing of War
8.5 Concluding Remarks
Notes
9 Friedrich List's Understanding of Democracy
9.1 Democracy Under Threat
9.2 The Concept of the Public
9.3 Freedom of Public Opinion
9.4 Scientific and Intellectual Freedom
9.5 Freedom of Speech and Press
9.6 The Establishment of Jury Courts
9.7 Opinion Poll
9.8 Concluding Remarks

Notes
10 Friedrich List's Opinion on Slavery
10.1 Fundamental Rejection
10.2 The Abolition of Slavery
10.3 The North American Slave Question
10.4 Commercial Slavery
10.5 Concluding Remarks
Notes
11 The Petition to the Federal Assembly-A German "Place of Remembrance"
Notes
12 The Labor and Exchange Value Theory as Well as the Money Theory of Friedrich List
12.1 The Importance of Labor as a Production Factor
12.2 The Labor Theory of Value
12.3 The Labor Union or Confederation of Productive Forces
12.4 The Theory of Exchange Value

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