Category
page 1French classical liberal economists
Frédéric Bastiat
French classical liberal theorist, political economist, and member of the French assembly (1801-1850)
Jean-Baptiste Say
French economist and businessman (1767–1832)
Michel Chevalier
French statesman (1806–1879)
Vincent de Gournay
French economist and intendant of commerce
Jérôme-Adolphe Blanqui
French economist (1798-1854)
Paul Leroy-Beaulieu
French economist (1843-1916)
Yves Guyot
French politician and economist (1843-1928)
Charles Dunoyer
French liberal economist (1786-1862)
Guy Sorman
French-American professor and writer
Maurice Block
German-French statistician and economist (1816-1901)
Pierre Louis Roederer
French politician, economist, and historian (1754-1835)
Joseph Garnier
French economist and politician (1813-1881)
Pascal Salin
French economist
Henri Baudrillart
French economist
Idéologues
thumb|right|Frontispiece of Destutt de Tracy's ''Éléments d'idéologie, Parts IV and V: Traité de la volonté et de ses effets'', 1815
The idéologues were a group of French philosophers, physicians and economists, active from the mid-1790s until the end of the Napoleonic era. With the philosopher Antoine Destutt de Tracy and the physician Pierre-Jean-Georges Cabanis as their leading theorists, the group aimed to develop a systematic "science of ideas" () grounded in eighteenth-century sensualist epistemology and focused on moral, political and educational reform. Although they were never a forma