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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Karl_KniesKarl Knies - Wikipedia

    Karl Gustav Adolf Knies (29 March 1821 – 3 August 1898) was a German economist of the historical school of economics, best known as the author of Political Economy from the Standpoint of the Historical Method (1853).

  2. Karl Knies, 1821-1898. Karl Gustav Adolf Knies (sometimes spelled Carl Knies) was one of the leading members of the "older generation" of the German Historical School . Karl Knies was educated the University of Marburg, graduating in 1846 with a thesis on ancient Roman history, and stayed on as a lecturer, often filling in for Bruno Hildebrand .

  3. La primera generación o escuela histórica más antigua estaba compuesta por tres miembros principales: Wilhelm Georg Friedrich Roscher (1817-1894), su director; Bruno Hildebrand (1812-1878); y Karl G. A. Knies (1821-1898).

  4. contribution to economics. In social science: Economics. …figures as Wilhelm Roscher and Karl Knies in Germany tended to dismiss the assumptions of timelessness and universality regarding economic behaviour that were axiomatic among the German followers of Smith, and they strongly insisted upon the developmental character of capitalism ...

  5. karl knies and the prehistory of neoclassical economics: understanding the importance of “ die nationaloekonomische lehre vom werth ” (1855) Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 April 2011

  6. 1 de ene. de 2018 · Abstract. Karl Knies was born in Marburg, the son of a police employee. He studied history and political science in Marburg, and in 1846 was appointed university lecturer. In 1855, after a break in his career due to political problems, he was appointed professor in Freiburg.

  7. www.wikiwand.com › en › Karl_KniesKarl Knies - Wikiwand

    Karl Gustav Adolf Knies was a German economist of the historical school of economics, best known as the author of Political Economy from the Standpoint of the Historical Method (1853). Knies taught at the University of Heidelberg for over 30 years, and was perhaps the most theoretically oriented economist of the older historical school.