Isaac Chan’s Reviews > The Road to Serfdom > Status Update
Isaac Chan
is on page 99 of 272
Note 3/n:
themselves up by the bootstraps.
Hayek also seems to live in a fantasy world in other domains. He says that under the free market, no one is truly excluded from their dreams - the plain girl who dreams to be a saleswoman can do so were she to take a paycut and then put in the effort over time, etc; whereas under a central planner, everyone would be directed to occupations that they are deemed suited for.
— Feb 21, 2026 10:58PM
themselves up by the bootstraps.
Hayek also seems to live in a fantasy world in other domains. He says that under the free market, no one is truly excluded from their dreams - the plain girl who dreams to be a saleswoman can do so were she to take a paycut and then put in the effort over time, etc; whereas under a central planner, everyone would be directed to occupations that they are deemed suited for.
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Isaac’s Previous Updates
Isaac Chan
is on page 137 of 272
Note n/n:
famous Franklin quote (which Hayek peruses) of 'Those who sacrifice liberty in exchange for security deserve neither' is equally philosophically meaningless.
I'm sure an individual with a predilection for security could equally use reason to argue why security dominates liberty.
— 4 hours, 24 min ago
famous Franklin quote (which Hayek peruses) of 'Those who sacrifice liberty in exchange for security deserve neither' is equally philosophically meaningless.
I'm sure an individual with a predilection for security could equally use reason to argue why security dominates liberty.
Isaac Chan
is on page 137 of 272
Note 3/n:
ideologue on neither liberty nor security). Pure reason cannot PROVE why a certain end, even liberty, is the ULTIMATE end: each individual has their own preference for either liberty or security based on their passions. This is why I find Hayek to be constantly shouting 'Liberty liberty liberty!' but never telling me, why liberty? He can't!
Sentimentalist moral philosophy is the same reason why the ...
— 4 hours, 24 min ago
ideologue on neither liberty nor security). Pure reason cannot PROVE why a certain end, even liberty, is the ULTIMATE end: each individual has their own preference for either liberty or security based on their passions. This is why I find Hayek to be constantly shouting 'Liberty liberty liberty!' but never telling me, why liberty? He can't!
Sentimentalist moral philosophy is the same reason why the ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 136 of 272
Note 2/n:
It seems to me that this is the classic conundrum of sentimentalist moral philosophy at play. Reason can only inform us HOW to reach our ends (in Hayek's case, his reason informed him that security will eventually subsume liberty - the end that he wants), but never WHICH ends to reach for. I find myself bound in a world where only the passions can inform us which ends I want (in my personal case, I'm an ...
— 4 hours, 25 min ago
It seems to me that this is the classic conundrum of sentimentalist moral philosophy at play. Reason can only inform us HOW to reach our ends (in Hayek's case, his reason informed him that security will eventually subsume liberty - the end that he wants), but never WHICH ends to reach for. I find myself bound in a world where only the passions can inform us which ends I want (in my personal case, I'm an ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 135 of 272
Note 1/n:
I've finished reading Chapter 9: Security and Freedom, and the main takeaway was that Hayek, of course, argues very well why trading off a bit of liberty for some security is a slippery slope that will eventually demand from us all our liberty, BUT, Hayek never (and I would argue, can never) proves/ argues WHY liberty should be the supreme good, or at least, why it is a better good than security.
— 4 hours, 26 min ago
I've finished reading Chapter 9: Security and Freedom, and the main takeaway was that Hayek, of course, argues very well why trading off a bit of liberty for some security is a slippery slope that will eventually demand from us all our liberty, BUT, Hayek never (and I would argue, can never) proves/ argues WHY liberty should be the supreme good, or at least, why it is a better good than security.
Isaac Chan
is on page 122 of 272
Note 3/3:
Since your income is not tied to equity risk, a salaried worker shouldn't expect to be compensated more than a business owner - but it seems that, according to Hayek, many well-trained, highly educated white-collar workers envy the blue-collar business owner who makes more than them.
— Feb 26, 2026 05:15AM
Since your income is not tied to equity risk, a salaried worker shouldn't expect to be compensated more than a business owner - but it seems that, according to Hayek, many well-trained, highly educated white-collar workers envy the blue-collar business owner who makes more than them.
Isaac Chan
is on page 121 of 272
Note 2/3:
- that back then, they didn't have opportunities, and our generation is the entitled generation, etc etc etc. Horseshit.
A key idea that Hayek plants in my mind, though, is that you should expect to not be compensated for the lower risk that you're taking. He comments that socialist mindset against the profit motive led many of the professional class to become salaried workers.
— Feb 26, 2026 05:15AM
- that back then, they didn't have opportunities, and our generation is the entitled generation, etc etc etc. Horseshit.
A key idea that Hayek plants in my mind, though, is that you should expect to not be compensated for the lower risk that you're taking. He comments that socialist mindset against the profit motive led many of the professional class to become salaried workers.
Isaac Chan
is on page 120 of 272
Note 1/3:
It is interesting that Hayek touches on the elite overproduction hypothesis (he doesn't use this term of course), and identifies this group as the root of much of socialist support - people with higher education and training who think that they deserve more than their jobs pay them. I find this interesting because I take this as evidence of the lies that our parents and grandparents like to feed us ...
— Feb 26, 2026 05:14AM
It is interesting that Hayek touches on the elite overproduction hypothesis (he doesn't use this term of course), and identifies this group as the root of much of socialist support - people with higher education and training who think that they deserve more than their jobs pay them. I find this interesting because I take this as evidence of the lies that our parents and grandparents like to feed us ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 99 of 272
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Have we not seen enough empirical studies that show systemic discrimination against certain groups in the free market? I am all for liberty, but I do not once believe that I could be a professional actor or football player if I just took a paycut and then put in the effort.
— Feb 21, 2026 10:58PM
Have we not seen enough empirical studies that show systemic discrimination against certain groups in the free market? I am all for liberty, but I do not once believe that I could be a professional actor or football player if I just took a paycut and then put in the effort.
Isaac Chan
is on page 94 of 272
Note 2/n:
greatest device of liberty in human history, under free markets, a poor man could lift himself out of poverty by earning more money.
...
Huh?
So ... solve homelessness by buying a house? Solve world hunger by ... feeding people? Solve poverty by ... earning money?
This is ridiculous. Obviously, Hayek's naive claim rests on the assumption that sufficient economic mobility exists for people to pull ...
— Feb 21, 2026 10:57PM
greatest device of liberty in human history, under free markets, a poor man could lift himself out of poverty by earning more money.
...
Huh?
So ... solve homelessness by buying a house? Solve world hunger by ... feeding people? Solve poverty by ... earning money?
This is ridiculous. Obviously, Hayek's naive claim rests on the assumption that sufficient economic mobility exists for people to pull ...
Isaac Chan
is on page 94 of 272
Note 1/n:
I get what Hayek is saying. Firstly, I broadly agree with Friedman's famous maxim that economic freedom is a necessary condition for political freedom. Thus, to surrender our economic freedom to a central planner would be to surrender our political freedom as well.
That being said, I must say that I think some of Hayek's views concerning the liberty of money to be naive. Hayek says that money is the ...
— Feb 21, 2026 10:56PM
I get what Hayek is saying. Firstly, I broadly agree with Friedman's famous maxim that economic freedom is a necessary condition for political freedom. Thus, to surrender our economic freedom to a central planner would be to surrender our political freedom as well.
That being said, I must say that I think some of Hayek's views concerning the liberty of money to be naive. Hayek says that money is the ...

