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Hayek and Spontaneous Orders

Müfit Sabooglu

Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 1996, vol. 18, issue 2, 347-364

Abstract: Friedrich A. Hayek's work spans over more than forty years and encompasses a number of social disciplines. That work has a single goal, however: the justification of a liberal social order. Apart from the justification of the liberal order, two other elements of his work in particular draw the attention of many economists: his definition of the economic problem as being one of coordination, and his effort to explain certain social phenomena as the result of a spontaneous order.

Date: 1996
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