Discover the Best Books Written by Bryan Caplan
Bryan Caplan is a professor of economics at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. He received his B.S. in economics from the University of California, Berkeley, and his Ph.D. from Princeton University. His professional work has been devoted to the philosophies of libertarianism and free-market capitalism, and anarchism.
(He is the author of the Anarchist Theory FAQ.) He has published in the American Economic Review, Public Choice, and the Journal of Law and Economics, among others. He is a blogger at the EconLog blog along with Arnold Kling. He occasionally has been a guest blogger at Marginal Revolution with two of his colleagues at George Mason, Tyler Cowen and Alex Tabarrok. He is an adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C. Currently, his primary research interest is public economics.
He has criticized the assumptions of rational voters that form the basis of public choice theory but generally agrees with their conclusions based on his own model of "rational irrationality." Caplan has long disputed the efficacy of popular voter models in a series of exchanges with Donald Wittman published by the Econ Journal Watch. Caplan outlined several major objections to popular political science and the economics sub-discipline of public choice.
Caplan later expanded upon this theme in his book The Myth of the Rational Voter (Princeton University Press 2007), in which he responded to the arguments put forward by Wittman in his The Myth of Democratic Failure. He maintains a website that includes a "Museum of Communism" section that "provides a historical, economic, and philosophical analysis of the political movement known as Communism" to draw attention to human rights violations which, despite often exceeding those of Nazi Germany, there is little public knowledge. Caplan has also written an online graphic novel called Amore Infernale.