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Rod Hay notes that Reder in is article "did not document actual
anti-Semitic remarks [by Hayek] but neither did he document the positive
acts in defense of jews that he did for Schumpeter and Keynes."
Rod has narrowed like a laser beam on perhaps the most highly
serious and even chilling aspect of the whole episode -- the fact
that Reder link Hayeks to a group of rather nasty anti-
semities on the basis of essentially no visible scholarship.
Reder makes it clear that he knows at least a bit of the literature on
Keynes and Schumpeter, and that he's looked at some section of
their private letters and papers. There is no evidence in Reder's
article other than the citation of a _SINGLE_ 1978 interview only
_very partially_ republished in Kresge's _Hayek on Hayek_ that
Reder has looked in any way at the large literature on & by Hayek, or that
he is familiar in the slightest degree with Hayek's private letters
and papers -- indeed, there is not even any hint that Reder is aware
of what Hayek has published on matters closely tied to the topic
of Reder's article, for example, Hayek's writings on his part Jewish
second cousin Ludwig Wittgenstein. As I've stated elsewhere, when
the matter is one of whether or not to label someone an anti-Semite --
and to group a person with a set of rather nasty anti-Semites -- someone
had better meet a very high level of scholarship, proof & care -- at
least as high as the level of moral opprobrium which would go with the
labeling. And in my judgment Reder has not come close to meeting
this standard.
Rod also remarks that "I did not read Reder as claiming that Hayek
was an anti-Semite but that he shared many of the stereotypes of the
period." One of the most disturbing things about Reder's article
vis-a-vis Hayek is the degree to which it trades in guilt by insinuation
and association -- within Reder's section on Hayek he includes a bit of
evidence of some nasty anti-Semitism on the part of some University of
Vienna faculty members. He then immediately _summarizes the chapter_
with the with words "the anti-Semitic remarks reported above", subtly
sweeping Hayek into the same net with the nasty anti-Semitism of these
U. of Vienna faculty members. The effect of the article is to repeatedly do
essentially this same thing time and again -- moving freely back and
forth between such expressions as "anti-Semitic", "(ambivalent) anti-Semitism",
"anti-semitism", "ideological-ethnic bias", and "distaste for Jews", etc.
-- leaving the overall impression that what we are we are dealing
with in different forms is anti-Semitism by some anti-Semites, with Hayek
fitting right in the mix.
Reder implies that Hayek fits right in the mix with Keynes and Schumpeter,
building the theory of a set of anti-Semites and a form of anti-Semitism
engendered by "the absence [on the part of these anti-Semites] of a 'need
to mind manners' .. stem[ing] from the confident (and correct) belief
that few Jews with whom they wished to maintain amicable relations would
not take umbrage at even overt breaches of good manners." Reder speaks
of his Keynes and Schumpeter as having power relations over the jews
they disparaged, and of the jews in their purview having no alternative
than the power structure these men controlled for the pursuit of their own
intellectual and career aspirations. But there are more than a few ways
that Hayek DOESN'T fit right in with Keynes and Schumpeter, beyond the more
obvious fact that Hayek belongs to a completely different generation.
In Hayek's case, when he came to maturity, it was von Mises (a jew) in the
power position within Hayek's employment situation. Similarly 23 of
the 26 members of the Mises seminar were Jewish -- and this was the circle
that Hayek prized intellectually. Likewise, Hayek's _own_ intellectual
seminar (the "spirit" circle), which he also highly prized, was composed
predominately of Jewish students and intellectuals. When Hayek left for
London, it was Hayek as much as anyone else who was an outsider -- and made
to feel one by people in powerful positions (including the Prime Minister
of Great Britain). If Reder had met even the minimal demands of good
scholarship, he would either have been aware of all this, or he would have
included these significant differences in his account.
Greg Ransom
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