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  1. The Counter-Revolution of Science. Studies on the Abuse of Reason. F. A. Hayek | Isis: Vol 43, No 4. Reviews. The Counter-Revolution of Science. Studies on the Abuse of Reason. F.

  2. The Counter-Revolution of Science.” Parts I-III. Economica N.S. 8 (February - August 1941): 281–320. Excerpt: “In the course of its slow development in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries the study of economic and social phenomena was guided in the choice of its methods in the main by the nature of the problems that it had to face.

  3. Science had turned from being a friend of freedom into being employed as its enemy. It is this linkage that makes the book so revealing and ultimately devastating. The Counter-Revolution of Science is Nobel Laureate Friedrich Hayek's forceful attack on this abuse of reason, and vision for recapturing an authentic understanding of the scope of science and its proper uses.

  4. 2ème partie : The Counter-Revolution of Science. 11. The Source of the Scientistic Hubris : l'Ecole polytechnique (trad., par Hervé de Quengo) 3ème partie : Comte & Hegel. 17. Comte and Hegel. Lire en ligne (en) [pdf] The Counter-Revolution of Science, édition de 1952 (fr) Acheter en ligne sur Amazon

  5. Simon, anxious to develop his " science of production "engaged him to write the further parts of L'Industrie.1 In any case, the new disciple was able to write in the three months or so during which he remained Saint-Simon's paid secretary the whole of the four parts of the third and the first and only part of the fourth volume of that publication.2

  6. The Counter Revolution of Science is one of Hayek's best books, and that is saying a lot. The Counter Revolution of Science was important in the twentieth century because it penetrated to the core of intellectual problems of that time. We live in a new century now, but the old problem of abusing reason remains.

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  7. The Counter-Revolution of Science. Paperback – January 1, 1964. Early in the last century the successes of science led a group of French thinkers to apply the principles of science to the study of society. These thinkers purported to have discovered the supposed "laws" of society and concluded that an elite of social scientists should assume ...

    • Friedrich A. Hayek