counter-economics

noun

Etymology

The term was first used by Samuel Edward Konkin III and J. Neil Schulman who are libertarian theorists, and was coined as part of their agorism doctrine. It is short for "counter-establishment economics"; equivalent to counter- + economics.

  1. derived from *nem- — “to distribute; to give; to take
  2. derived from *weyḱ- — “(verb) to enter in; to settle; (noun) settlement
  3. derived from οἰκονομῐκός — “skilled in household management; frugal, thrifty, economical
  4. derived from oeconomicus — “(noun) household manager, housekeeper, steward; (adjective) relating to orderly arrangement of written material
  5. derived from iconomike — “(noun) household management; person in charge of household management; (adjective) relating to household management; relating to domestic or family matters; relating to management of a state; reducing costs or expenses, economical
  6. derived from iconomique
  7. inherited from economike
  8. prefixed as counter-economics — “counter + economics

Definitions

  1. The study or practice of all peaceful human action which is forbidden by the State.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for counter-economics. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA