CIAO DATE: 03/02


Critical Review

Critical Review

Fall 1997 (Vol.11 No.4)

Hayek on Social Justice: Reply to Lukes and Johnston

By Edward Feser

Abstract

Hayek's attack on the ideal of social justice, though long ignored by political theorists, has recently been the subject of a number of largely unsympathetic studies (those of Lukes and Johnston being the most recent) in which his critique is dismissed as at best simply mistaken and at worst frivolous. The responses to Hayek's case against social justice, however, fail to draw any blood, for they do not seriously deal with Hayek's central claim that the very notion of social justice is incoherent.