Edvin Brant
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Edvin Brant | |
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Born | Edvin Viktors Brant March 30, 1788 |
Died | February 12, 1869 Karsuva, Grand Duchy of Visnevas | (aged 80)
Nationality | Hytek |
Alma mater | University of Krasno |
Notable work | An Inquiry into the Moral Dilemma of Uneven Wealth Distribution |
Region | Early Erdaran philosophy |
Institutions | Edvin Brant School of Economics |
Main interests | Classical economics, early socialism |
Notable ideas | Division of labour, syndicalism, wealth distribution |
Influenced |
Edvin Brant (born Edvin Viktors Brant; 30 March 1788 – 12 February 1869; aged 80) was a Hytek philosopher, economist and early socialist who is credited with the first proposals of widespread syndicalism in society to combat an exploitative upper-class in his 1824 thesis An Inquiry into the Moral Dilemma of Uneven Wealth Distribution. His economic theories have gone on to influence many modern socialist states, including Arlyon, Hytekia, and to an extent, Lilienburg. Brantian economics form one of the three pillars of modern Hytek socialism, along with Vilikist revolutionary thought and Aivarist social thought.