140 ECONOMIC ESSAYS IN HONOR OF JOHN BATES CLARK
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(e. g., Dunbar, Macvane, Laughlin, Sumner) a reactionary move-
ment toward a new affirmation of Ricardian “orthodoxy” as
reformulated in the work of J. S. Mill. Even Francis A. Walker
did not develop his father Amasa’s more original American treat-
ment, but built his scheme of distributive theory on the older
foundations of “land, labor and capital.” There was thus, in the
thinking of both the rival schools of thought of that time, a lack
of reality and of rootage in the solid earth of our own economic
conditions. American economic theorizing suffered then and still
suffers from this defect. Clark’s reformation of the capital con-
cept, though couched in excessively abstract phrases, was the
most vital attempt made in that period to find that reality. It
was a new and distinct declaration of independence for American
economic thinking.
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3. Traces of German Economic Philosophy
Almost equally lacking in Clark’s writings are any suggestions
that the ideas now under discussion were derived from German
sources; but that such is the case can hardly be doubted in view
of all the circumstances. Clark was a student in Germany in
1876-1877 and was for a considerable period at Heidelberg under
Karl Knies. Clark’s writings in the first ten years after his
return, mostly embodied in his Philosophy of Wealth, evidence
the deep influence of the ideas of the historical school and of the
economic-ethical doctrines then current in Germany. Knies him-
self had published in 1873 Das Geld subtitled also “a discussion of
capital”; a second, enlarged edition of this was dated 1885. In
this work appears a conception of capital strikingly like the one
of Clark which we are examining. This conception had become
traditional in German economics after the original work of Pro-
fessor F. B. W. Hermann * first began to exercise an influence
upon German thought. Hermann based his capital concept on
property,—though it cannot be said that he succeeded in cléarly
distinguishing the thought of the value of property from the
thought of the concrete goods. He included not only land within
the concept of capital, but also immaterial goods or legal rights
to income, even though the claims were upon persons and to
services, and not to material goods. Probably the greatest change
made by Herrmann was to extend the definition of capital beyond
t Staatswirthschaftliche Untersuchungen, etc., Munich, 1832.