Nobel prize-winner F.A. Hayek is one of the great thinkers of the 20th century, but up to now there has been no book for the non-specialist that describes his ideas and explains their significance.... This description may be from another edition of this product.
Friedrich von Hayek, along with Ludwig von Mises, were among a number of Jewish-Austrian intellectuals to flee Vienna during the 1930s and the encroaching threat of Nazi Germany. This concise 170 paged book by Eamonn Butler, who was Director of the Adam Smith Institute in Britain, attempts to convey the essentials of Hayekian thought that grew out of the economic thought of over 25 books. After a single paged preface and a 14 paged introduction "Hayek's life and work" are 6 chapters and an Epilogue: Chapter 1) Understanding how society works; Chapter 2) The market process; Chapter 3) Hayek's critique of socialism; Chapter 4) The criticism of social justice; Chapter 5) The institutions of a liberal order; Chaper 6) The constitution of a liberal state; Epilogue) Sense and sorcery in the social sciences. These chapters and epilogue are followed by notes, a select bibliography, and an index. Some interesting tidbits are that "Hayek's 1941 work, "The Pure Theory of Capital", continues the same theme of looking under the surface of the averages and aggregates which economists like to talk about" and this same "theme was taken up again in "The Counter-Revolution of Science". Butler says that the "problem for any planner is that the 'facts' he must deal with are not concrete things, but are the relationships and behaviour [sic] of individuals themselves, something which nobody can predict in advance" (pp8-9). I suppose somebody forgot to pass Butler's insight along to the American advertising and marketing sector, because they spend 100 billion a year attempting to do what Butler maintains cannot be done - predict the behavior of consumers. Another interesting aside is the story of Antony Fisher, who founded the Institute of Economic Affairs in London, England, at the suggestion of Hayek who "advised him to avoid politics, and do what he could in the field of ideas"(p12). Unwittingly, these free marketeers provided the camouflage for state corporatism that was appropriated by the Tories in both major parties. See Richard Cockett's "Thinking the Unthinkable". Hayek is not just an economist, he is also a sociologist: "If we are to understand how society works, we must attempt to define the general nature and range of our ignorance concerning it" he wrote in "The Constitution of Liberty" on page 23(p13). Hayek came up with a sociological term he dubbed "constructivism": "man's mind is itself a product of the civilisation in which he has grown up and . . . it is unaware of much of the experience which has shaped it - experience that assists it by being embodied in the habits, conventions, language and moral beliefs which are part of its makeup"(p152). He adds that "we can only know the world as it is filtered through past experience"(p153). Hayek's recognition of cultural programming stands in contradiction of his earlier view that the actions of consumers cannot be predicted. Butler adds "Note the crucial distinction between Hayek's liberalis
Excellent introduction to Hayek
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Professor Butler's "Hayek" is an excellent introduction to the works and thought of F. A. Hayek. I am familiar with many of F. A. Hayek's works, and was very impressed with the way that Professor Butler was able to capture the essence of F. A. Hayek's thought in such a clear and concise manner. I strongly recommend "Hayek" to anyone seeking an introduction to F. A. Hayek, or to anyone already familiar with F. A. Hayek who is interested in a brief summary of his works and thought.
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