ABSTRACT
Recent years have witnessed a remarkable revival in Hayek's reputation as an economist, a political philosopher, and an intellectual historian. This book shows why this revival has taken place by demonstrating the continuing relevance and vitality of Hayek's ideas. A group of internationally known scholars, of both the left and the right, critically assess his contribution to economics, political philosophy, legal theory, cognitive psychology and the history of ideas.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|115 pages
Theory and Practice of Economic Co-Ordination
chapter 3|27 pages
Mathematical Formalization and the Domain of Economics
The case of Hayek and New Classical Economics
part II|113 pages
Incentives and the Stability of Spontaneous Order
part III|55 pages
Law and Social Order
part IV|32 pages
Mind, Knowledge and Science
part V|34 pages
Ideas of the Past