[
US
/ˈheɪɪk/
]
NOUN
- English economist (born in Austria) noted for work on the optimum allocation of resources (1899-1992)
How To Use Hayek In A Sentence
- This of course provides an out for what you call the disciples of Hayek who can and have maintained government failure the culprit. Larvatus Prodeo
- They all know who Kahlo is, especially since a hirsute Salma Hayek played her in the Oscar-nominated biopic Frida.
- The other two great liberal theoreticians, Friedrich Hayek and Karl Popper spotted something remarkable in the young swotty New Yorker and encouraged him to argue beyond the closed world of academic text books.
- Liberty for Hayek has a specific meaning.
- Hayek, however, constructs his theory in such a manner as to render such criticisms difficult to sustain.
- Hayek's achievement was to verbalize the idea of a ‘universal order of peace.’
- No aprioristic armchair theorizing but extremely high quality empirical work addressing the issues Hayek was concerned with. Joe Salerno on The Austrian Movement - The Austrian Economists
- I have become "dilettante" literate in the difference, say, between Hayek and Keynes over the last 2 years or so. The Case for Killing Textbook Macro, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
- Hayek's antirationalism leads him to reject the idea of "construct [ing] social rules by deduction from explicit premises. Cato Unbound
- And now hear this: Hayek, even with monobrow, is stunning.