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Spontaneous order

Spontaneous order, also named self-organization in the hard sciences, is the spontaneous emergence of order out of seeming chaos. The term "self-organization" is more often used for physical changes and biological processes, while "spontaneous order" is typically used to describe the emergence of various kinds of social orders in human social networks from the behavior of a combination of self-interested individuals who are not intentionally trying to create order through planning. Proposed examples of systems which evolved through spontaneous order or self-organization include the evolution of life on Earth, language, crystal structure, the Internet, Wikipedia, and a free market economy.[1][2]

Spontaneous orders are to be distinguished from organizations as being scale-free networks, while organizations are hierarchical networks. Further, organizations can be (and often are) a part of spontaneous social orders, but the reverse is not true. While organizations are created and controlled by specific individuals or groups, spontaneous orders are created and controlled by no one in particular.[citation needed] In economics and the social sciences, spontaneous order is defined as "the result of human actions, not of human design".[3]

In economics, spontaneous order is an equilibrium behavior among self-interested individuals, which is most likely to evolve and survive, obeying the natural selection process "survival of the likeliest".[4]

History

According to Murray Rothbard, the philosopher Zhuangzi (369–286 BCE) was the first to propose the idea of spontaneous order. Zhuangzi rejected the authoritarianism of Confucianism, writing that there "has been such a thing as letting mankind alone; there has never been such a thing as governing mankind [with success]." He articulated an early form of spontaneous order, asserting that "good order results spontaneously when things are let alone", a concept later "developed particularly by Proudhon in the nineteenth [century]".[5]

The thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment developed and inquired into the idea of the market as a spontaneous order. In 1767, the sociologist and historian Adam Ferguson described society as the "result of human action, but not the execution of any human design".[6][7]

However, the term “spontaneous order” seems to have been coined by Michael Polanyi in his essay, “The Growth of Thought in Society,” Economica 8 (November 1941): 428–56.[8]

The Austrian School of Economics, led by Carl Menger, Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich Hayek made it a centerpiece in its social and economic thought. Hayek's theory of spontaneous order is the product of two related but distinct influences that do not always tend in the same direction. As an economic theorist, his explanations can be given a rational explanation. But as a legal and social theorist, he leans, by contrast, very heavily on a conservative and traditionalist approach which instructs us to submit blindly to a flow of events over which we can have little control.[9]

Proposed examples

Markets

Many classical-liberal theorists,[10] such as Hayek, have argued that market economies are a spontaneous order, and that they represent "a more efficient allocation of societal resources than any design could achieve."[11] They claim this spontaneous order (referred to as the extended order in Hayek's The Fatal Conceit) is superior to any order a human mind can design due to the specifics of the information required.[12] Centralized statistical data, they suppose, cannot convey this information because the statistics are created by abstracting away from the particulars of the situation.[13]

According to Hayek, prices in a market economy are the aggregation of information acquired when the people who own resources are free to use their dispersed knowledge. Prices then allow everyone dealing in a commodity or its substitutes to make decisions based on more information than he or she could personally acquire, information not statistically conveyable to a centralized authority. Hayek argues that interference from a central authority which affects price will have consequences they could not foresee because they do not know all of the particulars involved.

According to Norman Barry this is illustrated in the concept of the invisible hand proposed by Adam Smith in The Wealth of Nations.[1] Thus in this view by acting on information with greater detail and accuracy than possible for any centralized authority, a more efficient economy is created, and this benefits society as a whole.

Lawrence Reed, president of the Foundation for Economic Education, a libertarian think tank in the United States, argues that spontaneous order "is what happens when you leave people alone—when entrepreneurs... see the desires of people... and then provide for them." He further claims that "[entrepreneurs] respond to market signals, to prices. Prices tell them what's needed and how urgently and where. And it's infinitely better and more productive than relying on a handful of elites in some distant bureaucracy."[14]

Hayek’s account of the spontaneous order and the impersonal nature of the economic outcomes in the free market has led him to reject the notion of social (or distributive) justice as a meaningless concept.

Game studies

The concept of spontaneous order is closely related with modern game studies. As early as the 1940s, historian Johan Huizinga wrote that "in myth and ritual the great instinctive forces of civilized life have their origin: law and order, commerce and profit, craft and art, poetry, wisdom and science. All are rooted in the primeval soil of play." Following on this in his book The Fatal Conceit, Hayek notably wrote that "a game is indeed a clear instance of a process wherein obedience to common rules by elements pursuing different and even conflicting purposes results in overall order."

Anarchism

Anarchists argue that the state is in fact an artificial creation of the ruling elite, and that true spontaneous order would arise if it was eliminated. This is construed by some but not all as the ushering in of organization by anarchist law. In the anarchist view, such spontaneous order would involve the voluntary cooperation of individuals. According to the Oxford Dictionary of Sociology, "the work of many symbolic interactionists is largely compatible with the anarchist vision, since it harbours a view of society as spontaneous order."[15]

Sobornost

The concept of spontaneous order can also be seen in the works of the Russian Slavophile movements and specifically in the works of Fyodor Dostoyevsky. The concept of an organic social manifestation as a concept in Russia expressed under the idea of sobornost. Sobornost was also used by Leo Tolstoy as an underpinning to the ideology of Christian anarchism. The concept was used to describe the uniting force behind the peasant or serf Obshchina in pre-Soviet Russia.[16]

Other examples

Perhaps the most prominent exponent[17] of spontaneous order is Friedrich Hayek. In addition to arguing the economy is a spontaneous order, which he termed a catallaxy, he argued that common law[18] and the brain[19] are also types of spontaneous orders. In The Republic of Science,[20] Michael Polanyi also argued that science is a spontaneous order, a theory further developed by Bill Butos and Thomas McQuade in a variety of papers. Gus DiZerega has argued that democracy is the spontaneous order form of government,[21] David Emmanuel Andersson has argued that religion in places like the United States is a spontaneous order,[22] and Troy Camplin argues that artistic and literary production are spontaneous orders.[23] Paul Krugman has also contributed to spontaneous order theory in his book The Self-Organizing Economy,[24] in which he claims that cities are self-organizing systems. Credibility thesis suggests that the credibility of social institutions is the driving factor behind the endogenous self-organization of institutions and their persistence.[25]

Different rules of game would cause different types of spontaneous order. If an economic society obeys the equal-opportunity rules, the resulting spontaneous order is reflected as an exponential income distribution; that is, for an equal-opportunity economic society, the exponential income distribution is most likely to evolve and survive.[4] By analyzing datasets of household income from 66 countries and Hong Kong SAR, ranging from Europe to Latin America, North America and Asia, Tao et al found that, for all of these countries, the income structure for the great majority of populations (low and middle income classes) follows an exponential income distribution.[26]

Criticism

Roland Kley writes about Hayek's theory of spontaneous order that "the foundations of Hayek's liberalism are so incoherent" because the "idea of spontaneous order lacks distinctness and internal structure."[27] The three components of Hayek's theory are lack of intentionality, the "primacy of tacit or practical knowledge", and the "natural selection of competitive traditions." While the first feature, that social institutions may arise in some unintended fashion, is indeed an essential element of spontaneous order, the second two are only implications, not essential elements.[28]

Hayek's theory has also been criticized for not offering a moral argument, and his overall outlook contains "incompatible strands that he never seeks to reconcile in a systematic manner."[29]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Barry, Norman (1982). "The Tradition of Spontaneous Order". Literature of Liberty. 5 (2).
  2. ^ "Wikipedia's Model Follows Hayek". The Wall Street Journal. April 15, 2009.
  3. ^ Hayek, Friedrich A. (1969). Studies in Philosophy, Politics and Economics. Touchstone. p. 97. ISBN 978-0671202460.
  4. ^ a b Yong Tao, "Spontaneous economic order", Journal of Evolutionary Economics (2016) 26 (3): 467–500 https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00191-015-0432-6
  5. ^ Rothbard, Murray. "Concepts of the Role of Intellectuals in Social Change Toward Laissez Faire", The Journal of Libertarian Studies, Vol. IX No. 2 (Fall 1990)
  6. ^ Adam Ferguson 2007-05-09 at the Wayback Machine on The History of Economic Thought Website
  7. ^ Ferguson, Adam (1767). An Essay on the History of Civil Society. The Online Library of Liberty: T. Cadell, London. p. 205.
  8. ^ Straun Jacobs, “Michael Polanyi’s Theory of Spontaneous Orders,” Review of Austrian Economics 11, nos. 1–2 (1999): 111–127
  9. ^ Barry, Norman (University of Buckingham) Literature of Liberty; Vol. v, no. 2, pp. 7–58. Arlington, VA: Institute for Humane Studies Pub. 1982
  10. ^ MacCormick, D.N. (1989), "Spontaneous Order and the Rule of Law: Some Problems". Ratio Juris, 2: 41–54. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9337.1989.tb00025.x
  11. ^ Hayek cited. Petsoulas, Christian. Hayek's Liberalism and Its Origins: His Idea of Spontaneous Order and the Scottish Enlightenment. Routledge. 2001. p. 2
  12. ^ Hayek, F.A. The Fatal Conceit: The Errors of Socialism. The University of Chicago Press. 1991. p. 6.
  13. ^ Hayek cited. Boaz, David. The Libertarian Reader. The Free Press. 1997. p. 220
  14. ^ Stossel, John (2011-02-10) Spontaneous Order, Reason
  15. ^ Marshall, Gordon; et al. (1998) [1994]. Oxford Dictionary of Sociology (2 ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 19–20. ISBN 978-0192800817.
  16. ^ Faith and Order: The Reconciliation of Law and Religion By Harold Joseph p. 388 Berman Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Religion and law ISBN 0802848524 https://books.google.com/books?id=j1208xA7F_0C&lpg=PA388&ots=p0N6U4zWbf&pg=PA388
  17. ^ Hunt L. (2007) "The Origin and Scope of Hayek’s Idea of Spontaneous Order". In: Hunt L., McNamara P. (ed.) Liberalism, Conservatism, and Hayek’s Idea of Spontaneous Order. New York: Palgrave Macmillian[page needed][ISBN missing]
  18. ^ The Constitution of Liberty; Law, Legislation and Liberty
  19. ^ The Sensory Order
  20. ^ (PDF). fiesta.bren.ucsb.edu. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2011. Retrieved 14 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  21. ^ Persuasion, Power, and Polity
  22. ^ Dizerega, Gus (2001). Persuasion, Power and Polity: A Theory of Democratic Self-Organization (Advances in Systems Theory, Complexity, and the Human Sciences): Gus Dizerega, Alfonso Montuori: Books. ISBN 978-1572732575.
  23. ^ "pp. 195–211: Troy Earl Camplin". Studies in Emergent Order. 2010-08-20. Retrieved 2018-09-17.
  24. ^ The Self-Organizing Economy
  25. ^ Grabel, Ilene (2000). "The political economy of 'policy credibility': the new-classical macroeconomics and the remaking of emerging economies". Cambridge Journal of Economics. 24 (1): 1–19. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.366.5380. doi:10.1093/cje/24.1.1.
  26. ^ Yong Tao, et al. "Exponential structure of income inequality: evidence from 67 countries". Journal of Economic Interaction and Coordination (2017)
  27. ^ Kley, Roland (1994), Hayek's Social and Political Thought. pp. 194–211[ISBN missing]
  28. ^ Gray, John (1997). "Twentieth Century: The Limits of Liberal Political Philosophy", in An Uncertain Legacy, Essays on the Pursuit of Liberty. pp. 193–94. (Edward B. McLean, ed.)[ISBN missing]
  29. ^ Shearmur, Jeremy (1996). Hayek and After: Hayekian Liberalism as Research Programme, p. 177.[ISBN missing]

spontaneous, order, been, suggested, that, this, article, merged, into, self, organization, discuss, proposed, since, march, 2022, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template,. It has been suggested that this article be merged into Self organization Discuss Proposed since March 2022 This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Spontaneous order news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may not adequately summarize its contents To comply with Wikipedia s lead section guidelines please consider modifying the lead to provide an accessible overview of the article s key points in such a way that it can stand on its own as a concise version of the article October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Spontaneous order also named self organization in the hard sciences is the spontaneous emergence of order out of seeming chaos The term self organization is more often used for physical changes and biological processes while spontaneous order is typically used to describe the emergence of various kinds of social orders in human social networks from the behavior of a combination of self interested individuals who are not intentionally trying to create order through planning Proposed examples of systems which evolved through spontaneous order or self organization include the evolution of life on Earth language crystal structure the Internet Wikipedia and a free market economy 1 2 Spontaneous orders are to be distinguished from organizations as being scale free networks while organizations are hierarchical networks Further organizations can be and often are a part of spontaneous social orders but the reverse is not true While organizations are created and controlled by specific individuals or groups spontaneous orders are created and controlled by no one in particular citation needed In economics and the social sciences spontaneous order is defined as the result of human actions not of human design 3 In economics spontaneous order is an equilibrium behavior among self interested individuals which is most likely to evolve and survive obeying the natural selection process survival of the likeliest 4 Contents 1 History 2 Proposed examples 2 1 Markets 2 2 Game studies 2 3 Anarchism 2 4 Sobornost 2 5 Other examples 3 Criticism 4 See also 5 ReferencesHistory EditAccording to Murray Rothbard the philosopher Zhuangzi 369 286 BCE was the first to propose the idea of spontaneous order Zhuangzi rejected the authoritarianism of Confucianism writing that there has been such a thing as letting mankind alone there has never been such a thing as governing mankind with success He articulated an early form of spontaneous order asserting that good order results spontaneously when things are let alone a concept later developed particularly by Proudhon in the nineteenth century 5 The thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment developed and inquired into the idea of the market as a spontaneous order In 1767 the sociologist and historian Adam Ferguson described society as the result of human action but not the execution of any human design 6 7 However the term spontaneous order seems to have been coined by Michael Polanyi in his essay The Growth of Thought in Society Economica 8 November 1941 428 56 8 The Austrian School of Economics led by Carl Menger Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich Hayek made it a centerpiece in its social and economic thought Hayek s theory of spontaneous order is the product of two related but distinct influences that do not always tend in the same direction As an economic theorist his explanations can be given a rational explanation But as a legal and social theorist he leans by contrast very heavily on a conservative and traditionalist approach which instructs us to submit blindly to a flow of events over which we can have little control 9 Proposed examples EditMarkets Edit Many classical liberal theorists 10 such as Hayek have argued that market economies are a spontaneous order and that they represent a more efficient allocation of societal resources than any design could achieve 11 They claim this spontaneous order referred to as the extended order in Hayek s The Fatal Conceit is superior to any order a human mind can design due to the specifics of the information required 12 Centralized statistical data they suppose cannot convey this information because the statistics are created by abstracting away from the particulars of the situation 13 According to Hayek prices in a market economy are the aggregation of information acquired when the people who own resources are free to use their dispersed knowledge Prices then allow everyone dealing in a commodity or its substitutes to make decisions based on more information than he or she could personally acquire information not statistically conveyable to a centralized authority Hayek argues that interference from a central authority which affects price will have consequences they could not foresee because they do not know all of the particulars involved According to Norman Barry this is illustrated in the concept of the invisible hand proposed by Adam Smith in The Wealth of Nations 1 Thus in this view by acting on information with greater detail and accuracy than possible for any centralized authority a more efficient economy is created and this benefits society as a whole Lawrence Reed president of the Foundation for Economic Education a libertarian think tank in the United States argues that spontaneous order is what happens when you leave people alone when entrepreneurs see the desires of people and then provide for them He further claims that entrepreneurs respond to market signals to prices Prices tell them what s needed and how urgently and where And it s infinitely better and more productive than relying on a handful of elites in some distant bureaucracy 14 Hayek s account of the spontaneous order and the impersonal nature of the economic outcomes in the free market has led him to reject the notion of social or distributive justice as a meaningless concept Game studies Edit The concept of spontaneous order is closely related with modern game studies As early as the 1940s historian Johan Huizinga wrote that in myth and ritual the great instinctive forces of civilized life have their origin law and order commerce and profit craft and art poetry wisdom and science All are rooted in the primeval soil of play Following on this in his book The Fatal Conceit Hayek notably wrote that a game is indeed a clear instance of a process wherein obedience to common rules by elements pursuing different and even conflicting purposes results in overall order Anarchism Edit See also Self organization Principles and Anarchist symbolism Circle A Anarchists argue that the state is in fact an artificial creation of the ruling elite and that true spontaneous order would arise if it was eliminated This is construed by some but not all as the ushering in of organization by anarchist law In the anarchist view such spontaneous order would involve the voluntary cooperation of individuals According to the Oxford Dictionary of Sociology the work of many symbolic interactionists is largely compatible with the anarchist vision since it harbours a view of society as spontaneous order 15 Sobornost Edit The concept of spontaneous order can also be seen in the works of the Russian Slavophile movements and specifically in the works of Fyodor Dostoyevsky The concept of an organic social manifestation as a concept in Russia expressed under the idea of sobornost Sobornost was also used by Leo Tolstoy as an underpinning to the ideology of Christian anarchism The concept was used to describe the uniting force behind the peasant or serf Obshchina in pre Soviet Russia 16 Other examples Edit Perhaps the most prominent exponent 17 of spontaneous order is Friedrich Hayek In addition to arguing the economy is a spontaneous order which he termed a catallaxy he argued that common law 18 and the brain 19 are also types of spontaneous orders In The Republic of Science 20 Michael Polanyi also argued that science is a spontaneous order a theory further developed by Bill Butos and Thomas McQuade in a variety of papers Gus DiZerega has argued that democracy is the spontaneous order form of government 21 David Emmanuel Andersson has argued that religion in places like the United States is a spontaneous order 22 and Troy Camplin argues that artistic and literary production are spontaneous orders 23 Paul Krugman has also contributed to spontaneous order theory in his book The Self Organizing Economy 24 in which he claims that cities are self organizing systems Credibility thesis suggests that the credibility of social institutions is the driving factor behind the endogenous self organization of institutions and their persistence 25 Different rules of game would cause different types of spontaneous order If an economic society obeys the equal opportunity rules the resulting spontaneous order is reflected as an exponential income distribution that is for an equal opportunity economic society the exponential income distribution is most likely to evolve and survive 4 By analyzing datasets of household income from 66 countries and Hong Kong SAR ranging from Europe to Latin America North America and Asia Tao et al found that for all of these countries the income structure for the great majority of populations low and middle income classes follows an exponential income distribution 26 Criticism EditRoland Kley writes about Hayek s theory of spontaneous order that the foundations of Hayek s liberalism are so incoherent because the idea of spontaneous order lacks distinctness and internal structure 27 The three components of Hayek s theory are lack of intentionality the primacy of tacit or practical knowledge and the natural selection of competitive traditions While the first feature that social institutions may arise in some unintended fashion is indeed an essential element of spontaneous order the second two are only implications not essential elements 28 Hayek s theory has also been criticized for not offering a moral argument and his overall outlook contains incompatible strands that he never seeks to reconcile in a systematic manner 29 See also EditAnonymous Deregulation Emergence Free price system I Pencil by Leonard Read Mutual aid Natural law Natural order Revolutionary spontaneity Stigmergy Tragedy of the commons Wu wei Effortless Action References Edit a b Barry Norman 1982 The Tradition of Spontaneous Order Literature of Liberty 5 2 Wikipedia s Model Follows Hayek The Wall Street Journal April 15 2009 Hayek Friedrich A 1969 Studies in Philosophy Politics and Economics Touchstone p 97 ISBN 978 0671202460 a b Yong Tao Spontaneous economic order Journal of Evolutionary Economics 2016 26 3 467 500 https link springer com article 10 1007 s00191 015 0432 6 Rothbard Murray Concepts of the Role of Intellectuals in Social Change Toward Laissez Faire The Journal of Libertarian Studies Vol IX No 2 Fall 1990 Adam Ferguson Archived 2007 05 09 at the Wayback Machine on The History of Economic Thought Website Ferguson Adam 1767 An Essay on the History of Civil Society The Online Library of Liberty T Cadell London p 205 Straun Jacobs Michael Polanyi s Theory of Spontaneous Orders Review of Austrian Economics 11 nos 1 2 1999 111 127 Barry Norman University of Buckingham Literature of Liberty Vol v no 2 pp 7 58 Arlington VA Institute for Humane Studies Pub 1982 MacCormick D N 1989 Spontaneous Order and the Rule of Law Some Problems Ratio Juris 2 41 54 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9337 1989 tb00025 x Hayek cited Petsoulas Christian Hayek s Liberalism and Its Origins His Idea of Spontaneous Order and the Scottish Enlightenment Routledge 2001 p 2 Hayek F A The Fatal Conceit The Errors of Socialism The University of Chicago Press 1991 p 6 Hayek cited Boaz David The Libertarian Reader The Free Press 1997 p 220 Stossel John 2011 02 10 Spontaneous Order Reason Marshall Gordon et al 1998 1994 Oxford Dictionary of Sociology 2 ed Oxford Oxford University Press pp 19 20 ISBN 978 0192800817 Faith and Order The Reconciliation of Law and Religion By Harold Joseph p 388 Berman Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Religion and law ISBN 0802848524 https books google com books id j1208xA7F 0C amp lpg PA388 amp ots p0N6U4zWbf amp pg PA388 Hunt L 2007 The Origin and Scope of Hayek s Idea of Spontaneous Order In Hunt L McNamara P ed Liberalism Conservatism and Hayek s Idea of Spontaneous Order New York Palgrave Macmillian page needed ISBN missing The Constitution of Liberty Law Legislation and Liberty The Sensory Order Archived copy PDF fiesta bren ucsb edu Archived from the original PDF on 25 July 2011 Retrieved 14 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Persuasion Power and Polity Dizerega Gus 2001 Persuasion Power and Polity A Theory of Democratic Self Organization Advances in Systems Theory Complexity and the Human Sciences Gus Dizerega Alfonso Montuori Books ISBN 978 1572732575 pp 195 211 Troy Earl Camplin Studies in Emergent Order 2010 08 20 Retrieved 2018 09 17 The Self Organizing Economy Grabel Ilene 2000 The political economy of policy credibility the new classical macroeconomics and the remaking of emerging economies Cambridge Journal of Economics 24 1 1 19 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 366 5380 doi 10 1093 cje 24 1 1 Yong Tao et al Exponential structure of income inequality evidence from 67 countries Journal of Economic Interaction and Coordination 2017 Kley Roland 1994 Hayek s Social and Political Thought pp 194 211 ISBN missing Gray John 1997 Twentieth Century The Limits of Liberal Political Philosophy in An Uncertain Legacy Essays on the Pursuit of Liberty pp 193 94 Edward B McLean ed ISBN missing Shearmur Jeremy 1996 Hayek and After Hayekian Liberalism as Research Programme p 177 ISBN missing Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spontaneous order amp oldid 1131703613, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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