I do not understand why one would reference Reder (2000)
without referencing Hamowy (2002). Has Hamowy's rebuttal
of suggestions that Hayek was anti-Semitic been subsequently
disputed? Even Reder (2002) clarified in response that
"the subject of my article was not anti-Semitism simpliciter,
but ambivalent anti-Semitism", although Reder then refers to the
"pervasive (mild?) anti-Semitism" of "Keynes and his milieu",
so the subject seems to vary somewhat depending on the target economist.
Honestly, the more this matter is pursued, the more confused
I get. Is there something other than ad hominem going on
here, and if so, what is it?
Thanks,
Alan Isaac
PS
Hamowy, Ronald, (2001).
"A Note on Hayek and Anti-Semitism",
History of Political Economy, 34(1), pp. 255-260
Reder, Melvin W. (2002).
"Reply to Hamowy's Note on Hayek and Anti-Semitism",
History of Political Economy 34(1), pp. 261-272
On 5/21/2014 7:05 AM, Robert Leeson wrote:
> Melvin Reder's (2000) less-than-comprehensive account of Hayek's anti-Semitism
|