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Hayek on the Internet
Hayek's presence on the Internet
For resources of F. A. Hayek (1899-1992) on the Internet, you can't go wrong by starting from The Friedrich Hayek Scholars' Page maintained by Greg Ransom. Ransom is also the editor of the Hayek-L Forum. There are two blogs devoted to Hayek: Taking Hayek Seriously: The Home of Hayek Scholarship on the World Wide Web, and Hayek Links maintained by Miguel Noronha. Another place where you can find much about Hayek is the Ludwig von Mises Institute, which houses the Journal of Libertarian Studies and a number of periodicals on Austrian economics. For a comprehensive collection of Hayek-related articles in Chinese, try 思想評論: 哈耶克專輯. Hayek in his own words Hayek's Nobel Prize lecture, 1974: The Pretence of Knowledge. Read Hayek's two important articles on knowledge: Economics and Knowledge which first appeared in Economica in 1937; and The Use of Knowledge in Society which first appeared in American Economic Review in 1945. Hayek's Why I Am Not a Conservative is available from Niclas Berggren's homepage. Other writings by Hayek available on the Internet include: Tribute to Ludwig von Mises; Ludwig von Mises; Toward a Free Market Monetary System; Can We Still Avoid Inflation?; The Defense of Our Civilization Against Intellectual Error; and the Introduction to Frederic Bastiat: Selected Essays on Political Economy. The Idea Channel sells the video tapes and transcripts of a series of discussions Hayek had with Alchian, Bork, Buchanan, Hazlett, Leijonhufvud, Rosten and others while he was a visiting scholar at the Hoover Institution in 1978. Thomas Hazlett also had an interview with Hayek for the Reason Magazine, entitled The Road from Serfdom: Forseeing the Fall. Inside the Hayek Equation is an interview with Hayek by Stanford staff (audio and video). Full Chinese translation of The Road to Serfdom: 到奴役之路. Freedom's Nest has a wide range of Quotes from F.A. Hayek. Amazon.com has excerpts from a number of Hayek's books. They said these about Hayek Bruce Caldwell, in his Presidential Address to the History of Economics Society, gave his views on Hayek: Right for the Wrong Reasons?. Caldwell made the points that (i) Hayek "disagreed with most of the developments within economics" over his entire life, and (ii) "Hayek had a better handle on the nature of social phenomena than did the vast majority of his critics, that he understood the subject matter of economics better, and that as a result he was actually the better social analyst". Caldwell also wrote Popper and Hayek: Who Influenced Whom?, Why Didn't Hayek Review Keynes's General Theory? Caldwell has just published a new book on Hayek: Hayek's Challenge: An Intellectual Biography of F. A. Hayek (University of Chicago Press, 2003). Here are several related web articles and broadcast: Introduction (University of Chicagoi Press), The Hayekian Prism (David Gordon, mises.org, 7/4/04), The comeback man (The Economist, 4/3/04), The Austrian Teacher (Jason Steorts, National Review, 23/2/04), Friedrich the Great (Virginia Postrel, Boston Globe, 11/1/04), and Book Forum (Bruce Caldwell, Alan Ebenstein, Dick Armey): The Ideas and Impact of F. A. Hayek (Cato Institute, 2/2/04 in RealVideo) Jerry Muller wrote about The Untimely Liberalism of Friedrich Hayek. Muller argued that "the 1980s and 1990s were a Hayekian moment, when his once untimely liberalism came to be seen as timely". However, "like many thinkers who formulate their views primarily in response to some looming foe, Hayek's work had a tendency to one-sidedness and exaggeration". Muller was a commentator at the May 2001 CATO book forum: Friedrich Hayek: A Biography, featuring the author, Alan Ebenstein. You can read, listen to, or watch the event. Selected chapters of the Chinese translation of the book is available from 新浪讀書: 哈耶克傳. Ebenstein published Hayek's Journey: The Mind of Friedrich Hayek in 2003. According to John Cassidy, who wrote in the Summer 2000 issue of Hoover Digest, the twentieth century was The Hayek Century. Virginia Postrel, however, said "We Are Not All Hayekians Now" (Forbes, 20 March 2000). In the same issue of Hoover Digest, William F. Buckley Jr. wrote about The Courage of Friedrich Hayek. Read The New Palgrave entry on Hayek. Roger Garrison, the co-author of this entry, asked "Hayek Made No Contributions?" in response to Paul Krugman's assessment of Hayek's place in history. Two articles by Karen Vaughn, a noted Hayek scholar: Institutions and the coordination of plans in Hayekian economics: a preliminary look and Hayek's Theory of the Market Order as an Instance of the Theory of Complex, Adaptive Systems. Also from George Mason, Peter Boettke paid tribute to Hayek shortly after his death in 1992. Also read his introduction to The Legacy of F. A. Hayek: Politics, Philosophy and Economics: Which Enlightenment, Whose Liberalism?: Hayek Research Program for Understanding the Liberal Society and F. A. Hayek as an Intellectual Historian of Economics. Read John Gray's F. A. Hayek on Liberty and Tradition (1980) and F. A. Hayek and the Rebirth of Classical Liberalism (1982). You may be interested to read also Daniel Klein's The Ways of John Gray which focuses very much on this "ideological migrant" and his changing views on Hayek. Steven Horwitz has written a number of interesting articles on Hayek, including From Smith to Menger to Hayek: Liberalism in the Tradition of the Scottish Enlightenment and From The Sensory Order to the Liberal Order: Hayek's Non-Rationalist Liberalism Carlo Zappia often writes about Hayek's view on knowledge, a number of which available from here. Knowledge is also the focus of a paper by William Butos and Thomas McQuade: Mind, Market and Institutions: The Knowledge Problem in Hayek's Thought. Jim Powell wrote about The Life and Times of F.A. Hayek in his libertystory.net. h focuses very much on this "ideological migrant" and his changing views on Hayek. The CATO Journal has devoted the Fall 1999 issue to the legacy of Mises and Hayek. Articles include F.A. Hayek, on the Occasion of the Centenary of His Birth by Ronald Hamowy and Hayek's Liberal Legacy by Stephen Macedo. The CATO Journal also has Viktor Vanberg's Hayek's Legacy and the Future of Liberal Thought in the Fall 1994 issue. Vanberg is the author of Rules and Choice in Economics. Here's an excerpt, entitled Hayek's Constitutional Political Economy Eamonn Butler: Hayek: His contribution to the political and economic thought of our time. Jeremy Shearmur: Karl Popper and Friedrich Hayek. How about Hayek and Burke? Read Linda Raeder's The Liberalism/Conservatism Of Edmund Burke and F. A. Hayek: A Critical Comparison. Chris Guest: Hayek (1899-1992) On Government. Razeen Sally: Hayek and International Economic Order. Gerald O'Driscoll: The Meaning of Hayek. Norman Barry: The Tradition of Spontaneous Order. Peter Klein: Biography F. A. Hayek (1899-1992). Brian Crowley: The Ubiquitous Ideas of F. A. Hayek. Edward Feser: Hayek on Tradition. Walter Block: Hayek's Road to Serfdom. Amartya Sen: "An insight into the purpose of prosperity". Jonathan Sacks, a Rabbi, on why Hayek ends his last book The Fatal Conceit with the chapter "Religion and the Guardians of Tradition" in Markets and Morals. PBS's Think Tank had Milton Friedman, Karen Vaughn, Ronald Hamowy and Dean Baker as guests to discuss Friedrich Hayek in its 26 June 1999 programme. (Chinese) 鄧正來哈耶克研究 | 哈耶克社會理論的研究 ─ 《自由秩序原理》代譯序 | 《自由秩序原理》抑或《自由憲章》 |
(Chinese) 陳奎德: 海耶克. (Chinese) 鄧正來: 關於哈耶克理論脈絡的若干評注. (Chinese) 石元康: 海耶克論自由与法治 . (Chinese) 汪丁丁: 海耶克「擴展秩序」思想初論. (Chinese) 趙誠: 哈耶克在中國的命運. (Chinese) 王小東: 關於哈耶克及哈耶克在中國的幾點評論. (Chinese) 劉海波: 哈耶克的社會哲學和古典自由主義. (Chinese) 王春興: 經濟學者的修憲論:海耶克與布坎南的爭議. Finally, The
Friedrich Hayek Scholars' Page has an extensive collection of Quotes on Friedrich Hayek.
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Last updated: 7 October 2004. Maintained by Joseph Tsang 曾錫堯
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