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Complexity, spontaneous order, and Friedrich Hayek: Are spontaneous order and complexity essentially the same thing?

Henry E. Kilpatrick Jr

Senior Fellow at the School of Public Policy, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA 22030

Associate at Brown, Williams, Moorhead, & Quinn, 1155 15th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20005

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First published: 21 June 2001
Cited by: 9
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Number of times cited: 9

  • , Re-reading Friedrich Hayek and Karl Polanyi in the Late-Modern Condition of Fragility, Political Studies Review, 15, 3, (391), (2017).
  • , Understanding “Development”: Insights from Some Aspects of Complexity Theory, Homo Oeconomicus, 34, 2-3, (165), (2017).
  • , Austrian theories of entrepreneurship: Insights from complexity theory, The Review of Austrian Economics, 29, 3, (277), (2016).
  • , Complexity and the inherent limits of explanation and prediction: Urban codes for self-organising cities, Planning Theory, 14, 3, (248), (2015).
  • , A complexidade e o construtivismo na economia, Revista de Economia Política, 33, 3, (446), (2013).
  • , Systems Theory: Irredeemably Holistic and Antithetical to Planning?, Critical Sociology, 37, 3, (351), (2011).
  • , Hayek: Cognitive scientist Avant la Lettre, The Social Science of Hayek's ‘The Sensory Order’, 10.1108/S1529-2134(2010)0000013008, (115-155), (2015).
  • , Hayek's theory on complexity and knowledge: dichotomies, levels of analysis, and bounded rationality, Journal of Economic Methodology, 16, 3, (265), (2009).
  • , Emergence and Universal Computation, Metroeconomica, 55, 2‐3, (219-238), (2004).