I posted this commentary at one or two other places, but was hoping to hear feedback from those explicitly devoted to Austrian economics. Anyway, an early objection to the inevitable failures of central planning that the self-described socialist USSR had embarked upon on the basis of its failure to incorporate dispersed knowledge and a condemnation of the party dictatorship that state "socialism" involved is found in Peter Kropotkin's 1919 postscript to Words of a Rebel, which was published the year before the publication of Mises's 1920 Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth. As Kropotkin wrote:
The entire libertarian approach went virtually ignored by the Austrian school (Mises did devote an irrelevant cutting remark to Proudhon in his essay without actual argument), which placed focus on central planning mechanisms and procedures on account of the emergence of them in the economic structure of a country which was to later become a superpower of the world. That was their first failure.
Secondly, democratic market socialists have progressed beyond the mere punch in the gut that the development of the bureaucratic Lange model presented to Mises and have utilized Hayek's insights into dispersed knowledge problems to form a sound basis for advocacy of a decentralized market economy reliant on workers' ownership and management and in some cases a stakeholder economy, with Theodore Burczak in particular being integral in the development of "post-Hayekian" socialism, which even major Austrian scholars have admitted is serious. With the absence of any major Austrian argument against dispersedly planned socialism (with Mises incorrectly dismissing much of it as "workers' syndicalism," which he regarded as a form of capitalism), and the more recent development of adaptation of Hayek's insights by market socialists, have the Austrians now truly lost the economic calculation debate?
ok, what? I barter goods and services. I really think ALL of these different "schools of economic thought" would do themselves a favor to go study some applied physics and maybe even a little bit of quantum mechanics starting with the Schrödinger equation.
There is a serious viscosity problem when trying to analyze and compare micro-economics to macro-economics. An individuals micro-economic view will always be more viscous than the macro-economic reality. This large built in "shear" seems to never be accounted for appropriately by ANY economic philosophy.
I think that shear is what you are attempting to describe as the failure of the Austrian school. All anyone seems to agree on is that central economic planning is not a viable solution on the micro-economic level. Well whatever, I think any macro-economic philosophy will fail for any given micro-economic reality all the way up until the point that an individuals micro-economic reality approaches the capacity of the economy as a whole. This is what creates the desire for humans to look for and achieve economic "success".
As far as the Schrödinger equation, the measurement problem infects all philosophies of understanding where math is applied. To make matters even more incoherent and "fuzzy", we introduce an additional unpredictable and "random" variable in human decision making. That is to say, that humans irrational decision making will further distort any measuring device that attempts to find the difference between the micro-economic desires and the macro-economic realities and vice versa.
The more we attempt to observe and measure human economic decision making at the micro and macro levels, the less confident we are in the precise realities of those systems of decision making.
How are the probabilities converted into an actual, sharply well-defined outcome?
So my conclusion is that on the one hand, you have fractal geometry which gives rise to very precise yet fundamentally flawed conclusions about trends at every economic level. On the other hand, we have praxeolgy, which is pretty good about reminding us that humans can suddenly become irrational and that markets will create unpredictable outcomes at unpredictable times but absolutely sucks for creating a system to generate profits consistently for any given time horizon, the goal of everyone's macro and micro economic decision making.
I know I didn't address your question directly, because honestly I find getting too deep into these types of questions to be counter productive to my personal goals. The more I analyze and study all these different philosophies, the more detached from reality I seem to get. And I always come back to the simple conclusion that any economic decision I make will always be based on the free exchange of goods and service between individuals, and really that is all that matters to me.