Abstract
There are, familiarly, a range of distinct and competing accounts of the methodological
underpinnings of Menger' s work. These include Leibnizian, Kantian, Millian, and even Popperian
readings; but they include also readings of an Aristotelian sort, and I have myself made a number of
contributions in clarification and defence of the latter. Not only, I have argued, does the historical situation in which Menger found himself point to the inevitability of the Aristotelian reading; this reading fits also very naturally to the text of Menger's works.