Volltextsuche nutzen

B O O K SCREENER

Aktuelle Veranstaltungen

Events
  • versandkostenfrei ab € 30,–
  • 5x in Wien und Salzburg
  • 6 Mio. Bücher
Menü
Hayek's The Road to SerfdomOverlay E-Book Reader

Hayek's The Road to Serfdom

A Brief Introduction

Hayek's The Road to SerfdomOverlay E-Book Reader
E-Book
(EPUB mit drm)
1,25
E-Book
(EPUB mit drm)
1,25
inkl. gesetzl. MwSt.
EPUB (mit DRM) sofort downloaden
Downloads sind nur in Österreich möglich!
Leitfaden zu E-Books
In den Warenkorb
Click & Collect
Artikel online bestellen und in der Filiale abholen.
Artikel in den Warenkorb legen, zur Kassa gehen und Wunschfiliale auswählen. Lieferung abholen und bequem vor Ort bezahlen.
Derzeit in keiner facultas Filiale lagernd. Jetzt online bestellen!
Auf die Merkliste

Veröffentlicht 2013, von Caldwell Bruce Caldwell bei University of Chicago Press

ISBN: 978-0-226-14674-4
Reihe: Chicago Shorts
16 Seiten

 
The Road to Serfdom, F. A. Hayek's 1944 warning against the dangers of government control, continues to influence politics more than seventy years after it was turned down by three American publishers and finally published by the University of Chicago Press. A classic work in political philosophy, intellectual and cultural history, and economics, the definitive edition of The Road to Serfdom ...
Beschreibung
The Road to Serfdom, F. A. Hayek's 1944 warning against the dangers of government control, continues to influence politics more than seventy years after it was turned down by three American publishers and finally published by the University of Chicago Press. A classic work in political philosophy, intellectual and cultural history, and economics, the definitive edition of The Road to Serfdom included this essay as its Introduction. Here, acclaimed Hayek biographer and general editor of the Collected Works of F. A. Hayek series, Bruce Caldwell explains how Hayek came to write and publish the book, assesses misunderstandings of Hayek's thought, and suggests how Hayek's fears of Socialism lead him to abandon the larger scholarly project he had planned in 1940 to focus instead on a briefer, more popular and political tract-one that has influenced political and economic discourse ever since.