UFREEU.ORG invita a participar en la lectura del Seminario Permanente sobre CriptoEconomía, que quedó disponible desde el 01/11/2017. Durante los meses de diciembre, enero y febrero próximos, se ofrecerá acceso gratuito a los lectores que opten por automatrícula, quienes deberán enviar un email accediendo a la opción «inscripción» colocando CriptoEconomía, en el campo Mensaje. Los lectores matriculados recibirán, a inicios de marzo 2018, un comprobante de lectura con la Insignia de la Universidad, acreditando 5 créditos académicos. Un total de 30 créditos académicos sobre este seminario permanente, otorgarán el Nanograde of CryptoEconomic Expert.
Gold versus Fractional Reserves
By
The present worldwide inflation has done, and will continue to do, immense harm. But it may eventually lead to one great achievement. It may make it possible to restore (or perhaps it would be more accurate to say to create) a full 100 percent gold standard. Go to the paper.
Order without the State…
Leave people alone, and they will figure things out. This simple thesis, the heart of Edward Stringham’s Private Governance, is the touchstone for a myriad of examples from history and the present demonstrating that individuals, and not the state, are best suited for the complicated work of enterprise and ordered liberty.
Equality…
1. The Foundations of Liberal Policy
4. Equality
by Ludwig von Mises
Nowhere is the difference between the reasoning of the older liberalism and that of neoliberalism clearer and easier to demonstrate than in their treatment of the problem of equality. The liberals of the eighteenth century, guided by the ideas of natural law and of the Enlightenment, demanded for everyone equality of political and civil rights because they assumed that all men are equal. God created all men equal, endowing them with fundamentally the same capabilities and talents, breathing into all of them the breath of His spirit. All distinctions between men are only artificial, the product of social, human—that is to say, transitory—institutions. What is imperishable in man—his spirit—is undoubtedly the same in rich and poor, noble and commoner, white and colored.
