Like it or not, Hayek writes, "we owe the persistence of certain practices and the civilisation that resulted from them, in part to support from beliefs which are not true — or verifiable or testable — in the same sense as are scientific statements". Like others, he is "not prepared to accept the anthropomorphic conception of a personal divinity", yet "the premature loss of what we regard as nonfactual beliefs would have deprived mankind of a powerful support in the long development of the extended order that we now enjoy." The loss of these beliefs now would still create "great difficulties", hence "even an agnostic ought to concede that we owe our morals, and...not only our civilisation but our very lives, to the acceptance of such scientifically unacceptable factual claims."
These admissions, however, pose a further difficulty. Hayek appreciates the role of the monotheistic religions (and those which endorse private property) in sustaining our civilisation, and he recognises that, just as today's specialists cannot construct a morality with knowledge of its effects, so these religions could not have been established by a conspiratorial elite serving some noble lie or opiate to the masses. But he is unwilling to take the faithful step and thereby understand these religions (and the moral systems they profess) on their own terms. He seems to share Napoleon's sentiment that "I do not see in religion the mystery of the Incarnation, so much as the mystery of the social order."
This hesitation leaves Hayek advising contemporary society to appreciate the limits of its knowledge but calling upon man to follow laws of morality largely based on religious ideas in which man need not believe. Why, though, should man do so? To this, Hayek can only offer the familiar answer that traditional morality is the only way of which we know that civilisation can endure. But the implication is that man should suppress instinct (and the prospect of immediate pleasure) or disregard reason simply in order to bequeath civilisation to the next generation. Hayek is aware of the deficiencies of this uninspiring rationale and appears to remain dissatisfied.
"I long hesitated whether to insert this personal note here," Hayek wrote, referring to these remarks on religion. He decided to do so, he explained, because hearing these arguments from a "professed agnostic" might encourage religious people "to pursue those conclusions that we do share".
Hayek spent his life arguing for man's freedom. The Fatal Conceit was his last contribution to that effort. The question, though, is how man should then use that freedom. And that is the question Hayek was unable to answer because he could not cross the faithful threshold. Nevertheless, he recognised, in his final published words, that "on that question may rest the survival of our civilisation".


















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