Description
This collection includes Hayek’s most famous The Road to Serfdom, The Constitution of Liberty, Fatal Conceit and Law, Legislation and Liberty, each bound in leather, gilded, and ready to last for generations.
Friedrich A. Hayek, Nobel laureate economist and political philosopher, published his great work Law, Legislation and Liberty in 1973. In these volumes, he builds upon the themes addressed by his earlier works, notably, The Road to Serfdom and The Constitution of Liberty. Hayek’s central concern is laying out the distinction between the view that society is a designed and man-made order or rather an emergent, growing system. Road to Serfdom, one of the most noteworthy books of the twentieth century, has been published in several dozen languages and has seen printing after printing since its first appearance in 1944. For more than half a century, this book has influenced statesmen and thinkers, some of whom credit the recovery of freedom in Eastern Europe in part to this book. The Constitution of Liberty is considered Hayek’s classic statement on the ideals of freedom and liberty, ideals that he believes have guided—and must continue to guide—the growth of Western civilization.
The Austrian-born economist had first become interested in his field while serving as an artillery officer in World War I, and the year 1918 found him at the University of Vienna where he received degrees in law and economics. He began teaching at the London School of Economics in 1932 and later taught at Stanford University and the University of Chicago, among other institutions. Along the way, he helped organize the young scholars who became known as the Vienna Circle, was president of the London Economics Club (1936), and founded (1947) and was president of the Mont Pelerin Society. In 1974, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics, and the year before he died the United States gave him the Medal of Freedom. This last honor was deeply fitting, freedom having been central to Hayek’s thinking throughout his long career.