Alan Ebenstein has written a general favourable view of a complicated thinker and polymath, Friedrich von Hayek. He approaches the life of the Nobel laureate in organised way and provides a broader view of the environment and his interactions with others which led him to follow his thinking almost through to a conclusion
The Fatal Conceit (Paper) (Collected Works of F a Hayek)I must declare an interest. I find his work to be of particular interest to an understanding of a society built on exchange, which in it's complexity has led to an order of individuals with dispersed knowledge who are very productive and interconnected in an impersonal way.
That said, I am disposed to present an account which expresses much support for the subject matter of the book and the author.
In may ways this is a well written biography which does not elevate Hayek the man into anything else. It has an easy structure which can be followed although in some ways the temporal line tends to smooth out some of the sharpeness of the story. I particularly like the similarities that are drawn between Hayek and John Stuart Mill despite the widely held view that they had very different views. I am reminded of a story told to me from one of his associates of how he followed in Mill's footsteps on one occassion and had great fun cycling down a hill in Europe with feet off the pedals as Mill would have had to do in his time.
John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor: Their Friendship and Subsequent MarriageEbenstein does a good job in teasing out the connections in Hayek's thinking and is not afraid to say that the master was wrong on occasion. He does not dwell on the changes in Hayek's thinking which some believe took him down a wrong path but rather looks at the broader consequences of the development which took him to some of his greatest works.
The author has researched the book very well, including contributions from those who worked alongside him at various times, who are no longer with us. I remember a Hobart lunch at the Institute of Economic Affairs where Hayek's son Lawrence arrived and was greeted with a hug from Arthur Seldon who quipped that he could never imagine doing that to his old man which brought a huge grin and laugh from the younger Hayek. Their personal recollections help to flesh out the limited amount we know and provide a fuller, rounder picture that just that of an austere professor.
The area which I think is light is that of opposition to Hayek's thought from some quarters, where he is considered to be the fallen angel. Clearly, in Ebensteins account, he does not wish to expose these doctrinaire hostilities to the light of day, but it seems to me that they would tend to show that Hayek himself was no extremist but left that to others. The fact that the gentleman scholar appears never to have taken the attacks on his work personally speaks volumes for Hayek the man.
In short I believe that this, and it's companion volume
Hayek's Journey: The Mind of Friedrich Hayek belong, together with Bruce Caldwell's outstanding contribution
Hayek's Challenge: An Intellectual Biography of F. A. Hayek, next to each volume of the Collected Works, as books of true scholarship on Hayek and his thought. One idea came to me as I read, that a volume on Hayek and His Students would be a very good area for fruitful research on where his thought has been taken.