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・ Extended Kalman filter
・ Extended Log Format
・ Extended matching items
・ Extended memory
・ Extended metal atom chains
・ Extended metaphor
・ Extended mind thesis
・ Extended ML
・ Extended MMX
・ Extended Movement
・ Extended negative binomial distribution
・ Extended Net (Chinese constellation)
・ Extended newsvendor model
・ Extended Noise
・ Extended Opportunity Programs and Services
Extended order
・ Extended Parallel Process Model
・ Extended peer review
・ Extended periodic table
・ Extended periodic table (large version)
・ Extended physiological proprioception
・ Extended play
・ Extended Play '07
・ Extended Play (Austin Mahone EP)
・ Extended Play (Cabaret Voltaire EP)
・ Extended Play (Denver Harbor EP)
・ Extended play (disambiguation)
・ Extended Play (Dive EP)
・ Extended Play (film)
・ Extended Play (Fleetwood Mac EP)


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Extended order : ウィキペディア英語版
Extended order
Extended order is an economics and sociology concept introduced by Friedrich Hayek in his book ''The Fatal Conceit''. It is a description of what happens when a system embraces specialization and trade and "constitutes an information gathering process, able to call up, and put to use, widely dispersed information that no central planning agency, let alone any individual, could know as a whole, possess or control.”〔Hayek, F.A. "The Fatal Conceit: The Errors of Socialism". The University of Chicago Press. 1991.〕 The result is an interconnected web where people can benefit from the actions and knowledge of those they don't know. This is possible and efficient because a proper legal framework replaces trust, which is only practical in small circles of people who know each other socially. The extended order is at the heart of Hayek's thesis, in ''The Fatal Conceit'', where he argues that "our civilization depends, not only for its origin but also for its preservation, on what can be precisely described only as the extended order of human cooperation, an order more commonly, if somewhat misleading, known as capitalism.”〔
==Development of the extended order in society==
The ''extended order'' "is a framework of institutions – economic, legal, and moral – into which we fit ourselves by obeying certain rules of conduct that ''we never made'', and which ''we have never understood'' in the sense of which we understand how the things that we manufacture function.”〔 This "order resulted ''not'' from human design or intention but spontaneously: it arose from unintentionally conforming to certain traditional & largely moral practices, many of which men tend to dislike, whose significance they usually fail to understand, whose validity they cannot prove, and which have nonetheless fairly rapidly spread by means of an evolutionary selection – the comparative increase in population & wealth – of those groups that happened to follow them.”〔
The adoption of these practices, by these groups, “increased their access to valuable information of all sorts, & enabled them to be 'fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it' (Genesis 1:28). This process is perhaps the least appreciated facet of human evolution.”〔
The extended order's formation “required individuals to change their ‘natural’ or instinctual’ responses to others, something strongly resisted", whereas any & all "constraints on the practices of the small group, it must be emphasized & repeated, are ''hated''.”〔 This is because man “knows so many objects that seem desirable but for which he is not permitted to grasp, and he cannot see how other beneficial features of his environment depend on the discipline to which he is forced to submit – a discipline forbidding him to reach out for these same appealing objects. Disliking these constraints so much, we can hardly be said to have selected them; rather, these constraints selected us: they enabled us to survive.”〔
The evolutionary process of the extended order can be stimulated by increases in individual freedom and has even realized some of its greatest advances during times of anarchy, however it can (and quite often has throughout history) been hindered by government constraint, as Hayek says, "Protection of several property, not the direction of its use by government, laid the foundations for the growth of the dense network of exchange of services that shaped the extended order."〔 The extended order is "not a creation of man's reason but a distinct second endowment conferred on him by cultural evolution."〔
Not being genetically transferred, the continuing cultural evolution of the extended order requires teaching & passing on to each new generation the prevailing traditions, customs, morality & rules.〔 This cultural evolutionary requirement was also analyzed by Will and Ariel Durant who said: "Civilization is not inherited; it has to be learned and earned by each generation anew; if the transmission should be interrupted for one century, civilization would die, and we should be savages again."〔Will Durant and Ariel Durant, "The Lessons of History". Simon & Schuster. 1968; p. 101.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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