Born on 23 June 1901, the son of the Austrian architect Hugo Kauder and Ernestine Feigl.[1]
Worked as a university assistant, head of a private school, economic adviser on customs matters in the textile industry, and independent scholarly author.
After the Anschluss of Austria, Kauder emigrated to the United States, where he worked as a teacher at preparatory schools.[1]
In 1943 he married the German émigrée Helene I. Riegner, with whom he had two children.[1]
From 1947, Assistant Professor of economics and sociology at the University of Wyoming in Laramie.[1]
In 1960 he moved to Illinois Wesleyan University as a professor of economics.
Research stay at the Carl Menger Library of Hitotsubashi University in Tokyo (1960/61); work on a history of the marginal utility school, which was translated into Japanese and French.[1]
Retirement in 1968.
After becoming emeritus, Kauder went on to teach at the University of South Florida in Tampa.[1]
In 1971 he was invited by the University of Vienna to deliver the lecture marking the centenary of the publication of Carl Menger's “Grundsätze der Volkswirtschaftslehre” (Principles of Economics).[1]
Kauder studied economics in Berlin from 1919 and earned his doctorate in 1924 under Werner Sombart, a central representative of the younger Historical School.[2]
In a letter of 1932 Kauder described Machlup as a “diverse representative” of the Austrian School.[1]
In 1957 Kauder described Mises as Menger's “most faithful student”; he was on friendly terms with him and commented on his ontological approach as the benchmark of Austrian theory.[1]
Morgenstern was in lively correspondence with Kauder and encouraged his history-of-science work on the history of marginalism.[1]
Emil Kauder in the context of the School as a whole — five generations, their teacher-student lineages, circles and collegial ties.
Show in the family tree →