Word: hayek
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Speaking first on the program, Professor Usher developed Hayek's basic antithesis between that society which sets up a definite, unflexible end toward which it must constantly strive, and that society which recognizes a multiplicity of ends...
...however," stressed Sorokin, "a partisan of totalitarian economy. I am merely 'a conservative Christian anarchist'; I do not like any government." With this declaration, Harvard's stormy sociologist clarified his position in the controversy that, is currently raging over Friedrich A. Hayek's new book "The Road to Serfdom...
Usher Defends Hayek's Ideas...
Following close on he heels of two seminars conducted here this past weekend by Friedrich A. Hayek, author of the currently-controversial book "The Road to Serfdom," the newly-organized, non-partisan Harvard Political Science Forum is presenting in its first meeting a three-way discussion on the question "Is a planned economy the 'Road to Serfdom...
Merit Unrewarded. Not all good books of 1944 won the public they deserved. Friedrich A. Hayek's brilliant exposition of the perils of collectivism, The Road to Serfdom, Hans Kohn's timely historical study, Idea of Nationalism, and Swedish Economist Gunnar Myrdal's profound analysis of the U.S. Negro problem, An American Dilemma, won high critical praise but comparatively few readers. And much of the year's most intelligent poetry suffered the usual neglect: W. H. Auden's For the Time Being, E. E. Cummings' I X I, Robert Fitzgerald's A Wreath...