Remembering Hayek
8 May 2009 at 9:02 pm Peter G. Klein 1 comment
| Peter Klein |
In honor of today’s special day several writers have written personal reminisces of F. A. Hayek. Here are two by David Gordon and Mario Rizzo. (And here’s a 2003 remembrance from Ronald Hamowy.) The boys at orgtheory will get a kick out of the Merton reference in Gordon’s post.
Here’s an indirect Hayek reference that will amuse one or two of you. I was reading emails on my BlackBerry this afternoon while walking through the St. Louis airport and came across this passage, sent by a friend, from Terry Eagleton’s new book:
Because there is no necessity about the cosmos, we cannot deduce the laws which govern it from a priori principles, but need instead to look at how it actually works. This is the task of science. There is thus a curious connection between the doctrine of creation out of nothing and the career of Richard Dawkins. Without God, Dawkins would be out of a job. It is thus particularly churlish of him to call the existence of his employer into question.
Right after reading this, and pondering the word “cosmos,” I look up and see that I’m walking under a big sign, “Taxis.”
Entry filed under: - Klein -, Austrian Economics, People.









1.
Stan Kwiatkowski | 11 May 2009 at 6:03 pm
brilliant :D