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  1. European thought in the eighteenth century.Paul Hazard - 1954 - New Haven,: Yale University Press.
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  • Mutiny on board modernity: Heidegger, Sorel and other fascist intellectuals.Elliot Neaman - 1995 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 9 (3):371-401.
    Zeev Sternhell and Hans Sluga show that fascism and Nazism were part of an early twentieth?century intellectual rebellion against universalism, liberalism, and Enlightenment rationalism. Western technology, values, and political institutions were seen as outmoded, but instead of wanting to return to the traditions of the past, as conservatives wished, these intellectuals thought that fascism could transcend modernity. Sorel, Heidegger, and other fascist modernists offered different radical solutions to what was conceived of as the decadence of liberal Western civilization. It remains (...)
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  • Review of Friedrich A. Hayek: The Road to Serfdom[REVIEW]Friedrich A. Hayek - 1945 - Ethics 55 (3):224-226.
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  • The Counter-Revolution of Science; Studies on the Use of Reason. [REVIEW]Ernest Nagel - 1952 - Journal of Philosophy 49 (17):560-565.
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  • Review of F. A. Hayek: The Fatal Conceit: The Errors of Socialism[REVIEW]Tom G. Palmer - 1990 - Ethics 101 (1):192-193.
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  • Economic consequentialism and beyond.Jeffrey Friedman - 1994 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 8 (4):493-502.
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  • Hayek: the iron cage of liberty.Andrew Gamble - 1996 - Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press.
    Hayek, one of the key thinkers of the twentieth century, has also been much misunderstood. His work has crossed disciplines—economics, philosophy, and political science—as well as national boundaries. He was an early critic of Keynes and became famous in the 1940s for his warnings that the advance of collectivism in Western democracies was the road to serfdom. He was a key figure in the post-war revival of free market liberalism and achieved renewed notoriety and some political influence in the 1970s (...)
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  • Hayek's social and political thought.Roland Kley - 1994 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Revered by some as the most important twentieth century theorist of free society, Friedrich A. Hayek has been reviled by others as a mere reactionary. Impartial throughout, the author offers a clear exposition and balanced assessment that judges Hayek's theory by its own lights. The author argues that the key to understanding Hayek lies in an appreciation of the proper link between descriptive social science and normative political theory. He probes the idea of a spontaneous order and other notions central (...)
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  • Law, Legislation and Liberty. Vol. 1: Rules and Order.F. A. Hayek - 1973
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  • Hayek's Social and Political Thought.Roland Kley - 1996 - Philosophy 71 (277):473-475.
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  • The Politics of Cultural Despair: A Study in the Rise of the Germanic Ideology.Fritz Stern - 1963 - Science and Society 27 (3):379-381.
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