Czech
Neo-Marxist Karel Kosík in his book
Dialectics of the Concrete (1976) criticizes the following passage of the book: "The object of scientific inquiry is never the totality of all observable phenomena in a given time and space, but always only certain aspects of it ... The human spirit can never encompass the 'whole' in the sense of all different aspects of the real situation". Kosík, who believes Hayek wrote it in a polemic against Marxist concept of totality, clarifies that, "Totality indeed does not signify
all facts. Totality signifies reality as structured dialectical whole, within which
any particular fact (or any group or set of facts) can be rationally comprehended" as "the cognition of a fact or of a set of facts is the cognition of their place in the totality of reality." He considers Hayek's theory to be part of the
atomist–
rationalist philosophical thinking of reality, declaring "Opinions as to whether cognition of all facts is knowable or not are based on the rationalist–empiricist idea that cognition proceeds by the analytic–summative method. This idea is in turn based on the atomist idea of reality as a sum of things, processes and facts". Kosík claims that Hayek and those philosophers (including
Karl Popper on
The Poverty of Historicism and
Ferdinand Gonseth of
Dialectica) lack the understanding of the
dialectical process of forming the totality. American philosopher
Susan Haack references Hayek's book several times in her 2009 essay "Six Signs of Scientism". == References ==