Doctorate in law (Dr. iuris) at the University of Vienna in 1868, following studies at the Schottengymnasium and the University of Vienna.[1]
At the age of 26 he was reportedly unable to accept a call to the University of Vienna “owing merely to external circumstances”.
More than two decades of successful practice as a court and judicial advocate (Hof- und Gerichtsadvokat) in Vienna; founder and president of the Vienna Advocates' Club.[1]
Proponent and co-founder of the Vienna Advocates' Club in 1882.[1]
His first major work on value theory, <em>Der Werth in der isolirten Wirthschaft</em>, in 1889 — an early commitment to Menger's theory of marginal utility.[1]
Move from the legal profession to the academic world: Privatdozent in political economy at the University of Vienna from 1890; Habilitation with a work on value theory that built on <em>Der Werth in der isolirten Wirthschaft</em> (1889).[1]
From 1892, a member of the state examination board for the political sciences.[1]
Publication of <em>Wesen und die beiden Hauptrichtungen des Sozialismus</em> in 1893.[1]
Awarded the title of associate professor of political economy at the University of Vienna in 1900.[1]
Publication of <em>Die nationalökonomische Lehre vom Credit</em> (1903); the work was rejected by the Austrian School as incompatible with Wieser's theory of imputation and Böhm-Bawerk's theory of interest.[1]
Awarded the title of k. k. Regierungsrat (Imperial-Royal Councillor) in 1910.[1]
In later works, Komorzynski firmly opposed Johann Heinrich von Thünen's theory of wages.
In later works, Komorzynski firmly opposed Karl Marx above all.
Johann von Komorzynski in the context of the School as a whole — five generations, their teacher-student lineages, circles and collegial ties.
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