In trying to provide a "rational reconstruction" of morality, and thereby understand its formation, Hayek recognises the dilemma, finding himself "in the embarrassing position of wanting to claim that it must be the...economists" who are most able to explain those moral traditions that made the growth of civilisation possible. It is embarrassing because these are the same specialists who are "infected with constructivism". This recognition is instructive for two reasons. First, because it is surely not coincidental that those best placed to comment on the formation of morality (its source, development and, based on its successes, purpose) are also those most inclined to construct a new morality, a relation that calls into question Hayek's insistence on the differentiation between construction and reconstruction.
Second, because Hayek betrays a tacit telos of morality as he understands it. In speaking specifically of "those moral traditions that made the growth of civilisation possible", he indicates why he considers traditional morality to be important; it emerges that a moral system is evaluated by its propensity to "nourish larger numbers" of people and enable its adherents to "outstrip others whose morals were better suited to the achievement of different aims".
Hayek anticipates this reaction, though, and notes that, "although this morality is not 'justified' by the fact that it enables us to do these things, and thereby to survive, it does enable us to survive, and there is something perhaps to be said for that" (emphasis is his). In a sense, Hayek is of course correct: there is a great deal to be said for survival. But the insight is also deeply tautological, and it sheds further light on his affinity to Hume and reliance on "immanent criticism". In effect, the assumption underlying Hayek's approach is that we should aspire only to maintain and improve our material condition, without much thought as to whether such a goal is morally desirable. The system becomes its own justification, and the only rationale that we can advance is that it has enabled us to survive. Morality thus becomes the means by which we live together and prosper materially, rather than vice versa.
Again, though, one might retort that Hayek's enterprise is more modest than the foregoing has implied. All he is doing, perhaps, is inoffensively presuming that suffering is generally bad; that alleviating suffering is generally good; that largely sticking with what we know, along with occasional marginal improvements, is the recommended course, for it has delivered the greatest prosperity known to man; and that this agenda is threatened by scientism and rationalism.
However, even this limited reading encounters problems of its own. Aside from its exposure to the criticisms outlined above, one might additionally observe that the greatest increases in Western prosperity have occurred during the last couple of centuries, coinciding with some of the greatest challenges to traditional morality. It is very possible that capitalism's economic creative destruction might not be as independent of scientism's moral creative destruction as Hayek might wish to imagine. With this possibility in mind, a staunch moral guide is surely needed to navigate the socio-economic upheavals of our day, and this modest interpretation of Hayek's project, though surely on the right lines, does not quite deliver it.
Thus, the merits of his critique of reason notwithstanding, Hayek's approach toward traditional morality is lacking. Interestingly, Hayek, troubled by the inadequacies of his inquiry, appears to have agreed with this assessment.
In his final reflections, Hayek concedes that his moral philosophy is deficient. After all, is it truly satisfying to live as though man's, or at least society's, moral purpose in this world is mainly to survive? In the final chapter, entitled "Religion and the Guardians of Tradition", Hayek tries to answer how practices that people dislike, whose effects they cannot have anticipated, could have been passed down the generations. He notes that "part of the answer" is the evolution of moral orders through group selection (morality has survived because it has enabled its adherents to survive). "But," he adds, "this cannot be the whole story." Yet, he asks, if the beneficial effects of morality were not known in advance, whence did morality originate? And how has morality endured despite the opposition of instinct and, more recently, the assaults of reason? "Here we come to religion."


















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