海耶克 (HAYEK) 社會理論的思想源流:超越抑扭曲 B.MANDEVILLE 的思想?
Date Issued
2001-07-31
Date
2001-07-31
Author(s)
DOI
892414H002050
Abstract
The spontaneous order, understood as a self-regulating order, is connected with society in a larger sense. There is a tradition of western social thoery that is emphatic on the advantage to society of the order of unintended consequence. The idea of spontaneous order may be represented mainly by Hayek. Hayek is deeply appreciatine of Smith, Ferguson, and Hume, and locates these Scottish philosophers in relation to Mandeville's theory of society. However, various problems that follow are very far from easy to resolve, and this present project assumes the task to struggle with a number of then. The effort must be made to argue that whether Smith, Hume, and Ferguson should be understood as participants in the tradition of social evolutionism, just as to argue that whether Hayek, Mandeville, and the Scottish philosophers were in agreement about the place of politics.
Subjects
Hayek
Hume
Smith Ferguson
Mandeville
Spontaneous Order
Unintended Consequence
Publisher
臺北市:國立臺灣大學歷史學系暨研究所
Type
report
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