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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Dr. James Otteson, chair of the philosophy
department at The University of Alabama, will be awarded the seventh
in a series of prizes from the Fund for the Study of Spontaneous
Orders at the Atlas Economic Research Foundation.
The $10,000 prize is for scholars working outside the traditional
areas of economic study whose work is informed by an Austrian economic
perspective. Atlas’s Fund for the Study of Spontaneous Order,
supported by an anonymous donor, rewards and promotes the work
of scholars that study the relevance of the spontaneous order to
disciplines other than economics.
“The “spontaneous order” social theory of Austrian
economics holds that large-scale human social institutions— like
law, language, and even morality—are the unintentional result
of numberless decisions made by individual actors,” Otteson
said. “The individuals were not intending to create larger
institutions, but their localized actions nevertheless did so.”
In his book “Adam Smith’s Marketplace of Life,” Otteson
argues that spontaneous order social theory’s first systematic
treatment was by Adam Smith in the 18th century, then went on to
become a central theoretical tool in Austrian economics. He is
working on a book in which he argues that the spontaneous-order
theories developed during the Scottish Enlightenment shaped the
Darwinian theory of evolution and some current research in linguistics,
evolutionary psychology and experimental economics.
The award will be presented to Otteson in September at the George
Mason University School of Law in Arlington, Va.
Otteson is a College of Arts
and Sciences Leadership Board Faculty
Fellow. He earned a bachelor’s degree from the University
of Notre Dame and his master’s and doctoral degrees in philosophy
from the University of Wisconsin and the University of Chicago,
respectively.
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