Lexington Books
Pages: 488
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7391-9511-6 • Hardback • December 2015 • $170.00 • (£131.00)
978-0-7391-9513-0 • Paperback • July 2017 • $68.99 • (£53.00)
978-0-7391-9512-3 • eBook • December 2015 • $65.50 • (£50.00)
Leonidas Zelmanovitz is fellow at the Liberty Fund.
1. The Origin and Essence of Money
2. Brief Account of the Intellectual History of Money, Starting with Aristotle
3. Menger, Simmel, and Mises on Money Value
4. Comte’s Positivist Epistemology and Politics in a Comparative Analysis with the Austrian School of Economics
5. What is it Possible to Know about Money?
6. The Ethics of Money
7. Are There Unsurmountable Arguments for Monetary Prerogatives?
8. The Demand for Money, The Business Cycle, And The Current Monetary Regime
9. Incentives to Supply an Optimum Amount of Credit Under a 100% Reserve Requirement
10. “Inflation Targeting”: Neither New nor Effective
11. The Future of Money
12. Concluding Chapter
The Ontology and Function of Money is a terrific source for scholars wishing to delve more deeply into the history of the philosophy of money and to consider how influential philosophies may be shaping present-day monetary institutions, including central banks and their increasingly esoteric policies.... Beyond its rarity, this book will illuminate and expand any mind that is aware of how contemporary monetary policy is assessed primarily in formal or technical ways... It is also fruitfully interdisciplinary—no easy thing to execute.... [The book] it should be a worthwhile read both for technicians wishing to check their roots and for market critics willing to widen their horizons.— The Independent Review: A Journal of Political Economy
I learned much from reading it and recommend it to those seeking an overview of the major issues embedded in money—philosophical, commercial, economic, and political, economic—as well as to those seeking a distinctive and well-integrated analysis and a set of policy recommendations for developing sound money.
— Stephen Hicks, Chair, Philosophy Department, Rockford College
The Ontology and Function of Money is a terrific source for scholars wishing to delve more deeply into the history of the philosophy of money and to consider how influential philosophies may be shaping present-day monetary institutions, including central banks and their increasingly esoteric policies.... Beyond its rarity, this book will illuminate and expand any mind that is aware of how contemporary monetary policy is assessed primarily in formal or technical ways... It is also fruitfully interdisciplinary—no easy thing to execute.... [The book] it should be a worthwhile read both for technicians wishing to check their roots and for market critics willing to widen their horizons.— The Independent Review: A Journal of Political Economy
In The Ontology and Function of Money: The Philosophical Fundamentals of Monetary Institutions, Dr. Leonidas Zelmanovitz has ambitious plans. He seems to have read everything important related to money by philosophers, economists, historians, and sociologists…. The result is a substantial volume that is deeply meditative and the opposite of foolish. I learned much from it and recommend it to those seeking an overview of the major issues embedded in money—philosophical, commercial, economic, and political—as well as to those seeking a distinctive and well-integrated analysis and a set of policy recommendations for developing sound money.— Law and Liberty Online
The book here is an ambitious work that could well be described as a modern Treaty on monetary institutions and monetary policy.... It is a deep work that contains an academic rigor worthy of a doctoral thesis.... [T]he book may well have a revolutionary impact, a gateway to a broad heterodox bibliography on the monetary topic. (Translated from the original Spanish)— RIIM
This ambitious new book on the foundations of money and monetary institutions...is an impressive interdisciplinary exercise. . . .Zelmanovtiz's book will be appreciated by the initiated reader. It raises a very large number of relevant questions and puts together, in a thought-provoking way, a wealth of notions and concepts.— Quarterly Journal Of Austrian Economics
[Through an interdisciplinary research strategy], the author manages to contribute new insights about the nature of money and apply those insights to specific episodes of monetary and financial history, like widespread inflation in Brazil in the 1980s and 1990s and the recent global financial crisis.— Mauro Boianovsky, Universidade de Brasília
The book here is an ambitious work that could well be described as a modern Treaty on monetary institutions and monetary policy.... It is a deep work that contains an academic rigor worthy of a doctoral thesis.... [T]he book may well have a revolutionary impact, a gateway to a broad heterodox bibliography on the monetary topic. (Translated from the original Spanish) — RIIM
In this important book, Dr. Zelmanovitz presents a comprehensive philosophic and economic explanation and defense of the use of money in a free society. This is a rare and unique achievement and an important contribution to the defense of free markets. A must read for anyone seriously interested in markets and the role of money in them.— Yaron Brook, President and Executive Director, The Ayn Rand Institute
Dr. Zelmanovitz's new book displays a magisterial command of three huge scholarly literatures: the philosophy of money, the role of money in economic theory, and monetary policy—all in service of a sustained argument for classically-liberal political and economic institutions. He skillfully transcends the usual impasse between state and market theories of money. A major achievement.Or, to put it more briefly, Leo's book is on the money.— James Murphy, Dartmouth College
[Through an interdisciplinary research strategy], the author manages to contribute new insights about the nature of money and apply those insights to specific episodes of monetary and financial history, like widespread inflation in Brazil in the 1980s and 1990s and the recent global financial crisis.— Mauro Boianovsky, Universidade de Brasília
It’s a rich book, as Zelmanovitz includes discussions of all the major economists and philosophers whose thinking bears directly on the issues and puzzles of money. — Stephen Hicks, Chair, Philosophy Department, Rockford College
This book will delight those who want a broader view of the nature and functions of money than found in standard textbooks. The evolution of monetary institutions is seen through a wide lens focusing on the metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, and politics of money.— James A. Dorn, Senior Fellow, Cato Institute