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Frédéric Bastiat, Economic Sophisms [1845]Edition used:Economic Sophisms, trans. Arthur Goddard, introduction by Henry Hazlitt (Irvington-on-Hudson: Foundation for Economic Education, 1996).
 | About this title:An English translation of Bastiat’s series of short essays in which he tries to correct common misunderstandings about the free market.
Another copy of this book can be found in HTML format at our sister website Econlib.
About Liberty Fund:Liberty Fund, Inc. is a private, educational foundation established to encourage the study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals. Copyright information:Published online with the kind permission of the copyright holders, the Foundation for Economic Education.
Fair use statement:
This material is put online to further the educational goals of Liberty Fund, Inc. Unless otherwise stated in the Copyright Information section above, this material may be used freely for educational and academic purposes. It may not be used in any way for profit.
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- Arthur Goddard, Preface to the English-language Edition
- Henry Hazlitt, Introduction
- First Series, Chapter 1: Abundance and Scarcity
- First Series, Chapter 2: Obstacle and Cause
- First Series, Chapter 3: Effort and Result
- First Series, Chapter 4: Equalizing the Conditions of Production
- First Series, Chapter 5: Our Products Are Burdened With Taxes
- First Series, Chapter 6: The Balance of Trade
- First Series, Chapter 7: A Petition
- First Series, Chapter 8: Differential Tariffs
- First Series, Chapter 9: An Immense Discovery!
- First Series, Chapter 10: Reciprocity
- First Series, Chapter 11: Money Prices
- First Series, Chapter 12: Does Protectionism Raise Wage Rates?
- First Series, Chapter 13: Theory and Practice
- First Series, Chapter 14: Conflict of Principles
- First Series, Chapter 15: Reciprocity Again
- First Series, Chapter 16: Obstructed Rivers As Advocates For the Protectionists
- First Series, Chapter 17: A Negative Railroad
- First Series, Chapter 18: There Are No Absolute Principles
- First Series, Chapter 19: National Independence
- First Series, Chapter 20: Human Vs. Mechanical Labor and Domestic Vs. Foreign Labor
- First Series, Chapter 21: Raw Materials
- First Series, Chapter 22: Metaphors
- First Series, Chapter 23: Conclusion
- Second Series, Chapter 1: The Physiology of Plunder 1*
- Second Series, Chapter 2: Two Systems of Ethics
- Second Series, Chapter 3: The Two Hatchets
- Second Series, Chapter 4: Subordinate Labor Council
- Second Series, Chapter 5: High Prices and Low Prices 17*
- Second Series, Chapter 6: To Artisans and Laborers 23*
- Second Series, Chapter 7: A Chinese Tale
- Second Series, Chapter 8: Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc 33* 34*
- Second Series, Chapter 9: Robbery By Subsidy 36*
- Second Series, Chapter 10: The Tax Collector
- Second Series, Chapter 11: The Utopian 53*
- Second Series, Chapter 12: Salt, the Postal Service, and the Tariff 65*
- Second Series, Chapter 13: Protectionism, Or the Three Aldermen a Demonstration In Four Scenes Scene 1.
- Second Series, Chapter 14: Something Else 91*
- Second Series, Chapter 15: The Little Arsenal of the Freetrader 96*
- Second Series, Chapter 16: The Right Hand and the Left 101* (a Report to the King)
- Second Series, Chapter 17: Domination Through Industrial Superiority 108*
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