List-members,
It has been over 20 years since I plowed through the collected works of J.M. Keynes, but I still recall a few remarks that would fail present-day tests of Political Correctness. Do these remarks matter to Keynesian economics or the Economics of Keynes himself? No. Should such remarks change the way we think about Keynes' place in History of Economic Thought? No. As Barkley Rosser has pointed, Keynes, Schumpeter and Hayek grew up in a different era (and Hayek at least tried to get past some of his less modern feelings). As historians we should know better than to judge persons who grew upat the end of the 19th century by 21st century standards. We should also be able to separate History of Economic Thought from the personal feelings of great economists. This is not to say that everything posted is fully accurate. Richard Ebeling and Per Bylund have disproved the hypothesis that Mises was a Fascist.
Now to be fair to Dr Leeson Hayek did examine the spread of Fascist ideas: he thought England exported political and economic ideas during the enlightenment, but later came to import economic ideas, socialist ideas from Germany and France. Hayek thought that the political ideas of the enlightenment were not compatible with the economic idea of socialism. This is the core proposition of the Road to Serfdom. Hayek did point to Joan Robinson and a few others as holding fascist tendencies, but these persons were quoted fairly and accurately. Hayek did write a chapter on "Totalitarians in our Midst", but this was the product of analysis in an important topic, not a smear job.
If Dr Leeson wants to try to counter the History of Thought components of the Road to Serfdom that might be a useful exercise. I see little evidence of such intent in his SHOE postings. Recent SHOE posts have quoted Mises (1927) in a distortionary and misleading fashion, and towards the end of slamming him- not as an exercise in HET.
Intellectual history is not a forum for personal attacks on historical figures. Intellectual history is not an exercise in slamming dead economists for failing to conform to modern social standards. History of Economic Thought has enough problems gaining wider acceptance as it is. Let's gain respect for HET by keeping it respectable.
D.W. MacKenzie, Ph.D.
Carroll College, Helena MT
--------------------------------------------
On Thu, 5/22/14, Robert Leeson <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Subject: Re: [SHOE] The Hayek question
To: [log in to unmask]
Date: Thursday, May 22, 2014, 6:50 AM
1919: Romanov-ennobled fascists -
white terrorists - liquidate 100,000 Jews. Kenez, P. 1991.
The Prosecution of Soviet History: A Critique of Richard
Pipes' The Russian Revolution. Russian Review 50.3, July:
345-351.
1925: "At the beginning of the war, or even during the war,
if 12,000 or 15,000 of these Jews who were corrupting the
nation had been forced to submit to poison gas ... then the
millions of sacrifices made at the front would not have been
in vain.”
Hitler, A. 1939 [1925]. Mein Kampf. London: Hurst and
Blackett.
1927: "It cannot be denied" that "fascists" - including
"Ludendorff and Hitler" - will protect "civilisation" and
"property". “The deeds of the Fascists and of other
parties corresponding to them were emotional reflex actions
evoked by indignation at the deeds of the Bolsheviks and
Communists. As soon as the first flush of anger had passed,
their policy took a more moderate course and will probably
become even more so with the passage of time.”
Mises, L. 1985 [1927]. Liberalism in the Classical
Tradition. Irvington-on-Hudson, New York: Foundation for
Economic Education. Translated by Ralph Raico.
1934: Mises becomes a card-carrying Austro-Fascist and
member of the official fascist social club: Hülsmann, J. G.
2007. Mises: The Last Knight of Liberalism. Auburn, Alabama:
Ludwig von Mises Institute.
1940: The Last Knight of Liberalism leaves for neutral
Manhattan; Hayek also makes plans to leave.
1944: Omnipotent Government The Rise of the Total State and
Total War (von Mises (2010 [1944], 188, 202): The British
had an ‘ostrich policy in the face of the most serious
situation that Britain ever had to encounter ... It
was all wishful thinking, refusing to take account of
Hitler’s schemes as exposed in Mein Kampf.’
1975: Hayek informes a correspondent that he wished to find
an alternative to his “gone negro” Chicago bank.
1978: When asked what his “attitude to black people",
Hayek told his appointed biographer "that he did not like
‘dancing Negroes’. He had watched a Nobel laureate
[presumably Sir Arthur Lewis] doing so which had made him
see the ‘the animal beneath the facade of apparent
civilisation’” (Cubitt 2006, 23).
1980: When Cubitt (2006, 146, 51) asked Hayek “whether he
felt comfortable about Jewish people he replied that he did
not like them very much, any more than he liked black
people.” Hayek peddled standard stereotypes about Jewish
money-lenders.
----- Original Message -----
From: "John Médaille" <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: Thursday, 22 May, 2014 12:30:44 AM
Subject: Re: [SHOE] The Hayek question
You might already have done this, but could you provide a
source for these,
particularly the statements from 1925 and 27?
John
On Wed, May 21, 2014 at 6:09 AM, Robert Leeson <[log in to unmask]>
wrote:
> 1. "I did find offensive the apparent suggestion that
historians of
> economics might be qualified to diagnose mental
disease".
>
> Deductively, the diagnosis was provided by an
historian; the evidence
> suggests that it was not.
>
> 2. "von Mises brief praise of fascism".
>
> Deductively, this is a lapse "in moral judgment [which
does] not
> immediately translate into general theoretical error."
>
> Hayek disliked Jews and non-whites, especially "the
negro"; the
> Jewish-born Mises appears to have been prone to
anti-Semitism (especially
> when confronted by dissent). Using chronology, rather
than Miesean
> deductive logic, could Alan explain:
>
> 1919: Romanov-ennobled fascists - or white terrorists,
as they were then
> known - liquidated 100,000 Jews.
>
> 1925: "At the beginning of the war, or even during the
war, if 12,000 or
> 15,000 of these Jews who were corrupting the nation had
been forced to
> submit to poison gas ... then the millions of
sacrifices made at the front
> would not have been in vain.”
>
> 1927: "It cannot be denied" that "fascists" - including
"Ludendorff and
> Hitler" - will protect "civilisation" and "property"
(von Mises
> _Liberalism_ 1985 [1927]).
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Alan G Isaac" <[log in to unmask]>
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Sent: Tuesday, 20 May, 2014 8:53:44 PM
> Subject: Re: [SHOE] The Hayek question
>
> On 5/20/2014 7:07 AM, Robert Leeson quoted:
> > Austrians have framed Friedman ("fascist"), Pigou
> > ("communist spy"), Phillips ("underground
communist") and
> > Keynes (a “Godhating, principle-hating,
State-loving
> > homosexual pervert”; Keynesians have “pushed
the world
> > into evil, and therefore toward God’s righteous
> > judgment”).
>
>
> Are you proposing Gary North as a representative
"Austrian"?
> I don't think his association with the Ludwig von
Mises
> Institute, however regrettable it might be, earns him
that
> honor.
>
> I largely agree with Eloy: the posted project outline
struck
> my ears as a near-comical call for the promotion of ad
> hominem and guilt by association, not like a proposal
for
> historical investigation. Of course that may not
be the
> project's intent; it may just reflect a desire to
present it in
> a provocative and combative way.
>
> I would like to stress that I am not suggesting that a
project
> that asks why cranks are attracted to certain kinds of
ideas
> need be without merit, as long as there is no
presumption that
> the attraction of cranks to an idea implies that it is
> a crank idea. I also think that it can be
reasonable to
> document the moral failings of a writer, especially one
who
> seems to attract hagiography. So I would not
suggest that
> Hayek's involvement with Pinochet or von Mises brief
praise
> of fascism are not fair topics for discussion, as long
as
> the discussion acknowledges that lapses in moral
judgment do
> not immediately translate into general theoretical
error.
>
> Although I was mostly amused, I did find offensive the
> apparent suggestion that historians of economics might
be
> qualified to diagnose mental disease, and the apparent
> implication that such diagnoses could shed light on
the
> quality of theory produced by a mind. It may be
worth
> recalling that a very well-deserved "Nobel Prize in
> Economics" was awarded to a man whose struggles with
serious
> mental illness are a matter of record.
>
> Cheers,
> Alan Isaac
>
--
John C. Médaille
*A dead thing can go with the stream...Only a living thing
can go against
it.
-*G. K. Chesterton
Toward a Truly Free Market: A Distributist
Perspective<http://www.amazon.com/Toward-Truly-Free-Market-Distributist/dp/1935191810/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1280082231&sr=1-2>
The Vocation of Business: Social Justice in the
Marketplace<http://www.amazon.com/Vocation-Business-Social-Justice-Marketplace/dp/0826428096/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1280082193&sr=8-1>
The Distributist Review <http://distributistreview.com/mag/>
The Remnant Newspaper <http://www.remnantnewspaper.com/index.htm>
|