ABSTRACT

The central theme in the work of F.A. Hayek was the problem of order in society, and his focus was epistemological: he was concerned with the constraints on knowledge, the problems associated with its distribution, the structures in which it inheres, and the implications of these issues for the understanding of social phenomena generally. But while his work has greatly improved our understanding of market processes, application to more complex social arrangements was not an unambiguous success.

In seeking to progress beyond Hayek’s difficulties in formulating a more general theory of spontaneous order, this book fleshes out an analogy between social orders and the biological order detailed in Hayek’s The Sensory Order into a theory of adaptive systems. It focuses first on those aspects of the systems which enable them to learn about their environments, and then on the entrepreneurial processes which implement their anticipatory capabilities. The inclusion of anticipatory elements, inspired by the work of Robert Rosen, results in a theory of social orders which integrates many of the disparate findings of Austrian economists into a self-consistent conceptual framework and has applicability to other social arrangements such as firms and governments. Of particular interest is the interaction between the systems of science and government, an issue of significant current concern which is comprehensively explored here both theoretically and empirically.

This book is essential reading for anyone interested in Hayek, Austrian economics, social theory, and the history of economic thought more broadly.

chapter 1|6 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|7 pages

Background

chapter 6|19 pages

Economic systems

chapter 7|27 pages

Science systems

chapter 8|20 pages

Government systems

chapter 9|19 pages

Interactions with government

chapter 10|39 pages

State-sponsored science

chapter 11|5 pages

Hayekian systems