1 / 11

Spontaneous Order Theories

Spontaneous Order Theories Unlike power theories (top-down), these are bottom-up (predictability or coop emerges as by-product of individual actions). Hayek: All you need to know about Hayek comes from my lecture (you didn’t have to read the article).

tassos
Télécharger la présentation

Spontaneous Order Theories

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Spontaneous Order Theories • Unlike power theories (top-down), these are bottom-up (predictability or coop emerges as by-product of individual actions). • Hayek: All you need to know about Hayek comes from my lecture (you didn’t have to read the article). • Hayek discusses two types of order (focusing on predictability). • 1) Kosmos (spontaneous) Eg, market, society. Superior for efficiency, complexity. • 2) Taxis (man-made). Eg, orgs, govt. Hayek against gov’t interference in market, but also argues norms required to make spontaneous order beneficial (ie, cooperative).

  2. Axelrod I: How does cooperation emerge among self-interested individuals? Prisoner’s Dilemma: • Models situation in which individual incentives motivate action not in best interest of the group, all worse off than if cooperated (suboptimal equilibrium). • b/c defection always best individual strategy • Emergence of cooperation requires iterated games.

  3. Axelrod-2: Live & let live strat. in trench warfare • Key point: spontaneous coop can develop even with opposing interests • Small immobile units = iterated PD game. • Lessons of this study for PD game: • Truce ↑ value of “mutual cooperation” • ↑ retaliation for violation.

  4. Smith & Critiques • Adam Smith: Propensity to barter + desire for goods/$  DoL  increased productivity (↑ wealth)  social order b/c rising tide lifts all boats. • Assumes positive-sum resources and rational egoism Critique of Spontaneous Order Theories • Polanyi (historical): laissez faire capitalism  regulation • Unrealistic assumptions, esp. PD • What about social structure?

  5. II. Groups & Networks Theories Simmel: Two types of social organization • Concentric • organic/“by birth” • Social order by reinforcing conformity • High social control Family Village Clan

  6. Simmel, con’t • Juxtaposed • rational criteria; • Modern (heterogeneous) society •  individuality, ÷s loyalty,  group isolation

  7. Gellner • Talks about why people join groups (need each other for safety & survival) • Anarchy  cohesion/trust • No state & pastoralism  formation of tribes for defense. • Also talks about ties across groups. Ritualized betrayal  fluid/permeable associations. Prevents one getting too strong; groups self-police.

  8. Tocqueville • Equality feared as source of conflict • In America, political freedom prevents conflict b/c voluntary assoc help people internalize coop values. • Thinks centralized gov’t makes men less self-sufficient, less bonded together

  9. Hechter’s Theory of Group Solidarity • Assumes instrumental rationality: we join groups for net benefit, for goods we can’t produce efficiently ourselves • Solidarity varies w/ visibility (for social control) & dependence.

  10. Hechter, Friedman & Kanazawa • Group Membership means benefits, but also obligations (on time, conformity to group norms, contributions, etc.) • State “free-rides” on local social order, esp. that produced by deviant groups. • State will tolerate deviant groups unless they threaten state power, or organized grps.

  11. Final Exam • 25 multiple choice questions worth 4pts/ea • Exam focused on post-midterm material, but asks some questions comparing with earlier theories (Hobbes and Durkheim), and the theory groups (e.g., comparing group/network theories with theories from 1st part of course). • 2-4 questions per theorist. • Remember, take your time, cross off answers you know are incorrect, write yourself notes (diagram) for complicated/multi-part questions. • Bring scantron; will need to leave all personal possessions at front of room.

More Related