What to do about the Aged Pension?, page-159

  1. 22,326 Posts.
    lightbulb Created with Sketch. 769
    Hayek's typology of beliefs[edit]
    "Friedrich Hayek identified two different traditions within classical liberalism: the "British tradition" and the "French tradition". Hayek saw the British philosophers Bernard Mandeville, David Hume, Adam Smith, Adam Ferguson, Josiah Tucker and William Paley as representative of a tradition that articulated beliefs in empiricism, the common law, and in traditions and institutions which had spontaneously evolved but were imperfectly understood. The French tradition included Rousseau, Condorcet, the Encyclopedists and the Physiocrats. This tradition believed in rationalism and sometimes showed hostility to tradition and religion. Hayek conceded that the national labels did not exactly correspond to those belonging to each tradition: Hayek saw the Frenchmen Montesquieu, Constant and Tocqueville as belonging to the "British tradition" and the British Thomas Hobbes, Priestley, Richard Price and Thomas Paine as belonging to the "French tradition".[26] Hayek also rejected the label laissez faire as originating from the French tradition and alien to the beliefs of Hume and Smith."

    (source : wikipedia)

    I recommend that posters here read these Liberal philosophers before knocking
    Malcolm Turnbull for being a socialist.
    MM
 
arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch. arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch.