Article(electronic)December 2008

Who's Afraid of Friedrich Hayek?: The Obvious Truths and Mystical Fallacies of a Hero of the Right

In: Dissent: a quarterly of politics and culture, Volume 55, Issue 1, p. 85-90

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Abstract

Right-wingers love Friedrich Hayek. The Austrian-British economist is revered by true believers at the American Enterprise Institute, the Cato Institute, the National Review, and the Weekly Standard. Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher cited his ideas as central to the social revolutions they hoped to spark. Antigovernment ideologues admire him as one of those few who kept Adam Smith's fires burning during the dark reign of John Maynard Keynes in the West; his most famous book, The Road to Serfdom, has sold more than 350,000 copies in the United States alone. And the modern right has enlisted Hayek as a political weapon: Why can't those loony lefties acknowledge the simple and obvious truths that he understood?

Languages

English

Publisher

Project MUSE

ISSN: 1946-0910

DOI

10.1353/dss.2008.0030

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