DOES THE SENSORY ORDER HAVE
A USEFUL ECONOMIC FUTURE?
William N. Butos and Roger G. Koppl
1. INTRODUCTION
Cognition and psychology have become central issues in economics. While
this interest represents a radical change in economic theory, it does have a
useful history that we believe is only partially recognized by contemporary
economists. Although it is customary to cite Herbert Simon’s important
work in this regard,1 we suggest Hayek’s earlier work The Sensory Order
(1952) should enjoy similar billing.
The nexus of economics, cognition, and psychology has become a matter
of interest to many contemporary researchers.2 We think this current high
level of interest in such areas should induce a similarly high interest in
Hayek’s theoretical psychology. The level of interest has, in fact, been rising;
yet, it is not always clear what value Hayek’s very abstract notions might
have for economists. We will offer some answers that we hope will increase
economists’ interest in and understanding of Hayek’s psychology.
The next section is yet another summary of The Sensory Order. Logic
seemed to demand that we include this section, although we have tried to be
brief. Readers who are familiar with the work should probably read the
section anyway so that they know what we make of Hayek’s book. The
subsequent section articulates what we claim are errors of interpretation
that have made their way into the economics literature. We try to show why
Cognition and Economics
Advances in Austrian Economics, Volume 9, 19–50
Copyright r 2007 by Elsevier Ltd.
All rights of reproduction in any form reserved
ISSN: 1529-2134/doi:10.1016/S1529-2134(06)09002-8
19
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WILLIAM N. BUTOS AND ROGER G. KOPPL
each of the supposed errors is, in fact, a false reading of Hayek. In the
following section, we give our reasons why economists should read The
Sensory Order and build on it in their own work. Some of these reasons
concern methodology; others concern economic theory. A short conclusion
recapitulates our main points and gives a brief exhortation to the effect that
economists should let The Sensory Order inform their thinking.
2. YET ANOTHER SUMMARY OF THE SENSORY
ORDER3
The Sensory Order presents Hayek’s solution to the mind-body problem.
Hayek tried to show ‘‘how the physiological impulses proceeding in the
different parts of the central nervous system can become in such a manner
differentiated from each other in their functional significance that their
effects will differ from each other in the same way in which we know the
effects of the different sensory qualities to differ from each other’’ (Hayek,
1952a, p. 1).
The object of inquiry, then, is ‘‘the sensory order,’’ which tells us that this
is green and that is blue, this is warm, that is cold, and so on. He claims that
higher mental processes ‘‘may be interpreted as being determined by the
operation of the same general principle which we have employed to explain
the formation of the system of basic sensory qualities’’ (p. 146).
For Hayek, ‘‘psychology must start from stimuli defined in physical terms
and proceed to show why and how the senses classify similar physical stimuli
sometimes as alike and sometimes as different, and why different physical
stimuli will sometimes appear as similar and sometimes as different’’ (pp.
7–8). The senses give us a natural and naive picture of how the world works.
Science replaces this picture with another one, less likely to disappoint our
expectations. Theoretical psychology has the job of explaining how the
world described by science could generate organisms possessed of the more
naive picture from which this same scientific view departs.
Hayek’s answer depends on the idea that our brains are structured
organs. For Hayek’s theory, the crucial aspect of the brain’s structure is the
set of connections among nerve fibers. If nerve A fires, nerve B fires and C
does not. If nerve D fires instead, C fires and B does not. In many animals,
including humans, the network of connections is very complex. These connections govern the organism’s capacities for cognitive processes and how it
responds to external reality.
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
21
Thus, for Hayek, theoretical psychology must establish the relations between three ‘‘orders’’: the physical order and the isomorphic neural and
sensory orders. The physical order, the order of events described by natural
science,4 is external to the brain and produces the neural order. The neural
order, the set of connections between nerve fibers in the brain, produces the
sensory order of phenomenal experience. But the physical order is different,
as noted earlier, from the neural order and thus necessarily different from
the sensory order (Fig. 1).
The central nervous system is made up of fibers that carry impulses, most
of which are in the brain. The rest are afferent fibers and the efferent fibers,
carrying impulses up to and down from the brain, respectively. The consequence of a given set of impulses running up to the brain is an induced
pattern of impulses running down from the brain. What that induced
pattern of impulses will be depends on what happens in the brain. It depends
on the set of connections among nerve fibers.
An organism for which the induced constellation of efferent impulses bore
no relationship to the incoming afferent impulses would not be responding
to its environment. We would deny that it is thinking (Fig. 2).
An organism for which the induced constellation of efferent impulses bore
a fixed and simple relationship to the incoming afferent impulses would be
responding to its environment, but only in ways we would likely call
Physical Order
The physical order
produces the neural order
The physical order and the neural
order are not isomorphic. They
are structured differently.
Neural Order
The neural order
produces the sensory order
The neural order is isomorphic
to the sensory order. They are
structured the same.
Sensory Order
Fig. 1.
The physical order, the neural order, and the sensory order.
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WILLIAM N. BUTOS AND ROGER G. KOPPL
a
b
1
c
d
2
e
4
f
5
3
Fig. 2. The arrows represent nerves. Those labeled 1 through 5 are afferent fibers.
Those labeled a through f are efferent fibers. The box represents the brain, where
impulses coming up the afferent fibers are translated into impulses traveling down
the efferent fibers. In this case, the nerves are not connected in any stable patterns,
but only in random and changing patterns. There is no neural order. Thus, there is
no relationship between the pattern of firings of the afferent nerve fibers and the
pattern of firings of the efferent nerve fibers. The organism represented does not
follow any rules, nor does it think.
‘‘mechanical’’ (Fig. 3). We would deny that it is thinking. We recognize an
organism’s behavior as governed by mental phenomena when the organism
is responding to its environment, but in ways more complex than reflex
action (Figs. 4 and 5). The connections among nerve fibers create regularities or rules in the behavior of the organism. These rules create, in the
language of information theory, ‘‘mutual information’’ between the outputs
and the inputs to the brain.
The set of connections among nerves induces a model of the organism’s
environment. A model of this sort does not require a central nervous system.
Stuart Kaufmann notes that
complex living systems must ‘‘know’’ their worlds. Whether we consider E. coli swimming upstream in a glucose gradient, a tree manufacturing a toxin against a herbivore
insect, or a hawk diving to catch a chick, organisms sense, classify, and act upon their
worlds. In a phrase, organisms have internal models of their worlds which compress
information and allow action. (Kauffman, 1993, p. 232).
Central nervous systems, however, generally permit more elaborate models
to guide action. They permit, therefore, more elaborate patterns of action.
Hayek recognized that these models are at root classifications and that the
mind, therefore, is a classificatory device. Kaufmann makes the same point.
‘‘I permit myself the word ‘classified’ because we may imagine that the
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
23
a
1
b
2
c
3
d
4
e
5
f
Fig. 3. The arrows represent nerves. Those labeled 1 through 5 are afferent fibers.
Those labeled a through f are efferent fibers. The box represents the brain, where
impulses coming up the afferent fibers are translated into impulses traveling down
the efferent fibers. In this case, there is a neural order. Thus, there is a relationship
between the pattern of firings of the afferent nerve fibers and the pattern of firings of
the efferent nerve fibers. The relationship, however, simple and does not change over
time. Thus, the organism responds to its environment only in ways we consider
‘‘mechanistic.’’ It does follow rules, but it does not think.
a
b
c
d
1
2
3
4
e
5
f
Fig. 4. The arrows represent nerves. Those labeled 1 through 5 are afferent fibers.
Those labeled a through f are efferent fibers. The box represents the brain, where
impulses coming up the afferent fibers are translated into impulses traveling down
the efferent fibers. In this case, there is a neural order. Thus, there is a relationship
between the pattern of firings of the afferent nerve fibers and the pattern of firings of
the efferent nerve fibers. The relationship is not as simple as in Fig. 3. The organism
represented is capable of more complex responses to its environment.
bacterium responds more or less identically to any ligand binding the
receptor, be it glucose or some other molecule’’ (Kauffman, 1993, p. 233).
Perhaps the key insight of Hayek’s approach is that the set of connections
creates a classification over sensory inputs. In a simple system, an individual
nerve firing would induce one invariant response in the organism. If A fires,
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WILLIAM N. BUTOS AND ROGER G. KOPPL
a
b
β
α
1
2
c
d
3
4
e
5
f
Fig. 5. The arrows represent nerves. Those labeled 1 through 5 are afferent fibers.
Those labeled a through f are efferent fibers. The large box represents the brain,
where impulses coming up the afferent fibers are translated into impulses traveling
down the efferent fibers. The smaller boxes represent substructures within the brain.
In this case, the neural order is arranged hierarchically. Most of the fibers going out
of box a are inputs to box b, which receives most of its input from box a. Box a
performs low-level classifications, which are then reclassified by box b. The connection from nerve 5 to nerve f represents the possibility of pure reflex action even in a
relatively complex organism. The two heavy arrows illustrate the possibility that
there may be feedback loops within the hierarchical structure of the brain. The
organism represented in this figure is capable of more complex behaviors than the
organism represented in Fig. 4. Increasing the number of nerves and the number of
sub-boxes increases the potential complexity of the organism’s behavior. For sufficiently complex organisms, mechanistic descriptions of the organism’s behavior may
fail to communicate as much information as descriptions referring to mental states
and categories. While there is a relationship between the pattern of firings of the
afferent nerve fibers and the pattern of firings of the efferent nerve fibers, the relationship may be too complex to express in mechanistic language. It may be necessary to refer to what the organism is ‘‘trying to do,’’ what it ‘‘likes’’ and ‘‘dislikes,’’
and what the organism ‘‘remembers’’ or has ‘‘learned.’’
do x. This simple stimulus-response mechanism constitutes a particular kind
of classification of environmental states. If A fires, the environment is in a
state that makes x good to do; if A does not fire, the environment is in a
state that makes x bad to do. In a more complex system, the behavioral
implication of A firing would depend on whether B and C are firing as well.
Since there are four combinations of B and C firing or not, the firing of A
could induce as many as four different responses of the organism. A system
of still greater complexity might have internal states dependent on its history; these internal states would be a further source of variation in the
behavioral implications of A firing. In all these systems, the simple and the
complex, the intertemporal pattern of nerve firings induces a behavioral
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
25
response. Such patterned responses of the organism constitute a classification based on ongoing flows of nerve firings that generate a model of the
organism’s environment in the context of a prior interpretation of the environment, what Hayek calls the ‘‘map,’’ that has proved useful in the past.
As Hayek mentions, the model reflects the ongoing adaptation of the organism to incoming sensory impulses and thus indicates an anticipatory
state to the perceived environment. The ‘‘sensory order’’ is an aspect of this
model. Our sensory model of the world tells us that some things are hot and
others are cold, some things are blue and others are red.
Relatively complex central nervous systems will operate by ‘‘multiple
classification.’’ The classificatory structure will be ‘‘multiple’’ in at least
three senses. First, the same stimulus may be shunted into more than one
taxonomic box at the same time. Hayek (1952a, pp. 50–51) gives the
example of a signal that might make more than one bell ring. Second, as we
have seen, the way a signal is classified will depend on what other signals are
coming in at the same time. Finally, and most importantly, the classes at one
level may be grouped to form classes at a higher level. In a system with this
property, Hayek (1952a, p. 51) emphasizes, ‘‘the distinct responses which
effect the grouping at a first level become in turn subject to a further classification (which also may be multiple in both the former senses).’’ A system
of classification that is multiple in this third sense can produce a relatively
complex model of its environment (see Fig. 5).
Hayek says that the interlaced system of connections is built up by experience. In part it is the evolutionary experience of the organism’s species
that determines the set of connections among nerve fibers. In part, however,
it is the organism’s individual experience that decides. We consider each
process, phylogeny and ontogeny, in sequence.
Natural selection has produced some of rules that govern the brain’s
activity in response to incoming impulses (Hayek, 1952a, pp. 102–103).
These rules translate afferent impulses into efferent impulses. When an
organism happens to be governed by mental rules that give it differential
reproductive success, those rules are passed on.5
As we have said on another occasion, the simplest version of a central
nervous system matching Hayek’s description
would put any impulse cluster into one of two boxes. We might think of one box as
carrying the label ‘‘go right’’ and the other ‘‘go left.’’ Biological evolution would tend to
select, from among such simple organisms, those whose central nervous systems tended
to say ‘‘go left’’ when more nourishing environments existed to the left and ‘‘go right’’
when more nourishing environments existed to the right. Natural selection would tend to
favor those spontaneous variations that generated more complex responses (‘‘go left then
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WILLIAM N. BUTOS AND ROGER G. KOPPL
right’’) to environmental stimuli. Emergent species would, then, tend to have ever more
receptor sites, ever more nerve fibers, ever larger brains, and, in consequence, ever more
complex ways of classifying and responding to incoming signals (Butos & Koppl, 1997,
p. 338).
The mind is rule governed. According to Hayek, mental activity in the brain
uses rules to classify the impulses clusters coming up afferent nerve fibers
and it is this classification of impulse clusters that constitutes the sensory
order. To perceive, say, ‘‘green’’ is find a certain set of impulses classified by
the central nervous system in the same way as others which induce the
perception of ‘‘green.’’ The experience of ‘‘green’’ is a property of the mind’s
taxonomic framework, not the external world. If evolution has done its job,
however, the classification giving us the experience of color will reflect
something worth knowing about the outside world.
Roger Shepard (1992) provides good examples of how the physical order
shapes the phenomenal order in the course of biological time. Our visual
system transforms the continuous variation in the wavelength of light into
qualitative changes in color. The phenomenal order of color perception is
not like the physical order of continuously varying wavelengths. Our color
perception differs from the corresponding phenomena as represented in the
physical sciences. In generating this different picture, however, biological
evolution favored the emergence of a sensory order that reflected something
worth knowing about the world. The salient phenomenal difference between
red and green might have evolved so that our ancestors could distinguish
wholesome ‘‘red’’ from dangerous ‘‘green’’ fruit. This sharp contrast, as
opposed to the subtle gradations of a continuously varying scale, might have
helped our ancestors to make better choices about what to eat. They would
have enjoyed, therefore, a fitness advantage over others. (Shepard (1992,
p. 525) proposes this fruity explanation only as an example of the general
idea. His more empirically grounded examples are too time consuming to
enter into here).
The process of natural selection plays a role in forming the organism’s set
of neural connections. The organism’s personal history plays a similar role.
The connections that confirm expectations, and thus seem to help the
organism, are strengthened and their impact on its behavior grows. The
connections that lead to disappointed expectations are weakened and their
impact on its behavior shrinks. Here, however, the organism makes its own
evaluation of the outcome of any behavior. Instead of differential reproductive success we have, presumably, feelings of ‘‘pleasure and pain’’
governing the process in conjunction with biologically programmed learning
algorithms.
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
27
Evolution establishes certain connections. Many properties of the set of
connections (and perhaps many specific connections) are determined by the
history of the organism’s species. The history of the individual then operates
on these connections at, as it were, a higher level to form higher order classes
of connections among nerve fibers. Evolution may also establish a set of
possible patterns of connection, implementing one rather than the others on
the basis of the organism’s personal history. As we shall see, Hayek dodges
the question of how much to attribute to evolution and to the organism’s
individual development. As we have just hinted, it is also probably true that
the division between ‘‘innate’’ and ‘‘learned’’ is too neat. If evolution sets
out an array of possible developmental paths and if the path taken depends
on individual experience, what is ‘‘determined phylogenetically’’ and what is
determined ‘‘ontogenetically’’?
Hayek’s view of the mind as a taxonomic order follows from the motivating insight of his theory. According to Hayek, ‘‘we do not first have
sensations which are then preserved by memory, but it is as a result of
physiological memory that the physiological impulses are converted into
sensations. The connections between the physiological elements are thus the
primary phenomenon which creates the mental phenomena’’ (1952a, p. 53).
Interpreters often fail to understand this basic insight of Hayek’s theory. In
the next section we will call this the pons asinorum of Hayek’s psychology.
Hayek’s view of the mind and its evolution implies that the mind is a kind
of map of the external world. The map says, for example, that red fruit is
good to eat and green fruit is not. In some sense, perhaps, the map is not
‘‘true.’’ Some red fruit kills and some green fruit nourishes. If the map was
determined phylogenetically, however, it was probably useful to the species,
at least in the period in which the model evolved. If the map was determined
ontogenetically, it was probably useful to the individual, at least in the period
in which it evolved. In many cases, the map results from a combination of
ontogenetic and phylogenetic influences as well as, of course, from chance.
Hayek explicitly declined to judge which mental rules were determined
phylogenetically and which rules were determined ontogenetically. He says,
however, that ‘‘as far as the highest centers are concerned,’’ it ‘‘perhaps may
be justified in some measure’’ to assume they arise only in the course of the
‘‘development of the single individual.’’ Such an assumption, however,
‘‘certainly does not apply to the connections existing at the lower levels,
which form an essential part in the complete process of classification’’
(Hayek, 1952a, p. 103).
Interpretation for Hayek occurs as a consequence of the operation of a
unified cognitive structure comprised of a mutable but relatively stable
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WILLIAM N. BUTOS AND ROGER G. KOPPL
‘‘map’’ reflecting the individual’s past experience and a more fluid ‘‘model’’
reflecting the current and anticipated environment (Hayek, 1952a, pp. 107–
118). The map and the model are not fully separate because the significance
of the model comes from its position within the map.6 As McQuade (2006,
pp. 60–61) notes, the map represents the individual’s ‘‘previously experienced
environment in the sense that it’’ represents a ‘‘classification of the stimuli
that have impinged on the system from that environment’’ while the ‘‘pattern
of impulses generated in the map by the current stimuli’’ reflect a ‘‘model of
the current environment’’ that is ‘‘characteristic not only of the experienced
stimuli but also of the usual implications of these stimuli.’’ The map is
something like a set of implications waiting to happen. From this set, the
model pulls out the implications relevant to the organism’s current environment. The model is ‘‘anticipatory and embodies the system’s expectations of
likely subsequent stimuli.’’ Thus, we find in The Sensory Order, with its
classificatory process and the resulting interpretation it produces, a description of an emergent order, the map, that supports within it an expectational
model of the current and anticipated environment.7 Some aspects of the
mind’s map are quite invariant for the individual. They are the product of
evolution of the species and cannot be altered by the organism’s personal
experiences. Others are more variable products of the individual’s experience.
In the final chapter of The Sensory Order, Hayek draws out some philosophical conclusions from his theory. Among them is an argument that the
mind cannot explain itself. It is an argument for the existence of logically
necessary limits of knowledge. Hayek’s argument of the limits to knowledge
has important economic implications; we discuss this matter below in
Sections 4.2 and 4.3.
The mind, in Hayek’s theory, is a classificatory device. It is characteristic
of a classificatory device that it is more complex than any object it classifies.
It is more complex in the sense that the number of classes into which it might
place an object is greater than the number of such classes that actually fit the
object. Consider a device to sort oranges into two groups, small and large.
The device has two classes into which it might place any orange. But any
orange fits only one of the two classes; it is either large or small, but not
both. Hayek’s argument is at least similar to Georg Cantor’s demonstration
that any set is smaller than its power set, as Hayek noted.8
If the mind is a classificatory device, it can classify only objects less complex than itself. That is, it can give to any object a description (‘‘large’’ or
‘‘small’’ in our orange example) that has fewer categories than the mind uses
in making such a classification. Thus, if a given mind wishes to explain (or
describe or model) itself or another mind of similar complexity, then it must
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
29
simplify. It cannot give a complete explanation of itself because it cannot be
more complex than itself. We can fully explain only phenomena that are
simpler than ourselves. When we turn to more complex phenomena, we can
give only relatively vague or general explanations. Our models of complex
phenomena simplify. For them, we must content ourselves with an ‘‘explanation of the principle’’ (Hayek, 1952a, pp. 182–184).
Note that the limit to our knowledge that Hayek shows us is not merely
that of some ‘‘bound’’ to our calculative prowess. It is a logically necessary
limit that would exist even if our rationality were infallible. We address the
economic significance of this self-reflective character of Hayekian ignorance
in Section 4.2 below. In addition, because of this logical limitation on the
mind’s ability to explain itself, mental processes must always exist which the
mind can never fully explain or articulate. Thus, Hayek’s theory establishes
the cognitive basis for tacit knowledge. Aside from relocating rationality to
be more than a fully specifiable and explicit characteristic of cognitive
functioning, the idea of tacit knowledge also carries momentous implications for the economic system’s capacity for coordinating individuals’ plans,
given that some part of each individual’s knowledge is necessarily tacit.
Our overview of The Sensory Order has been very brief. A more detailed
account of our understanding of Hayek’s cognitive theory will emerge in the
sections to follow where we criticize some interpretations of it with which we
disagree and apply Hayek’s theory to questions in methodology and economic theory.
3. SOME COMMON ERRORS OF INTERPRETATION
OF THE SENSORY ORDER
3.1. Misinterpretation i: The Pons Asinorum of The Sensory Order
A pons asinorum, literally, ‘‘bridge of fools,’’ is any concept or problem
difficult to master. The term once referred principally to Euclid’s fifth
proposition, namely that the angles at the base of an isosceles triangle are
equal. Beginners struggle greatly with this problem. It is the problem you
have to master at the start of your study of Euclid. Until you have crossed
the pons asinorum, you have not properly entered the field and you cannot
yet form independent opinions on the subject.
As we indicated earlier, Hayek’s psychology has a pons asinorum. The
central insight of Hayek’s theory has proved too much to master for many
would-be critics, exponents, and commentators. Recall our quote from
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WILLIAM N. BUTOS AND ROGER G. KOPPL
Hayek: ‘‘[We] do not first have sensations which are then preserved by
memory, but it is as a result of physiological memory that the physiological
impulses are converted into sensations. The connexions between the physiological elements are thus the primary phenomenon which creates the
mental phenomena’’ (1952a, p. 53). Memory precedes perception. Hayek
plainly labels this idea ‘‘the central thesis’’ of his book (p. 52).
Often, Hayek is taken to offer the opposite view, which appeals more to
intuition and common sense. We have sensations, experiencing, perhaps,
‘‘green’’ or ‘‘warm.’’ These sensations are stored away in memory. The mind
then sets to work on these stored memories and abstracts classes of objects.
The concrete comes first, the abstract later. Perception precedes memory.
Hayek, however, explicitly rejects ‘‘the traditional view’’ that ‘‘experience
begins with the reception of sensory data’’ which ‘‘form the raw material
which the mind accumulates and learns to arrange in various manners’’
(Hayek, 1952a, p. 165). ‘‘Every sensation,’’ Hayek notes, ‘‘even the ‘purest’,
must y be regarded as an interpretation of an event in the light of the past
experience of the individual or the species’’ (p. 166). For Hayek, the abstract
comes first, the concrete later. He even wrote an essay on the point called
‘‘The Primacy of the Abstract’’ (Hayek, 1978).
Hayek’s idea of the primacy of the abstract is similar to the idea of
Kantian categories. The great philosopher Immanuel Kant argued that our
experiences of the world require prior ideas or ‘‘categories’’ such as space,
time, and causality. We cannot interpret any observation as ‘‘this causing
that’’ unless we are already equipped with the ‘‘category’’ of cause-andeffect.9 Hayek’s ‘‘physiological memory’’ acts like Kantian categories, but
there are important differences.
The categories of our mind are shaped by our philological and ontological
history. Thus our ‘‘synthetic a priori’’ ideas are not fixed for all time. All
people share some ideas and mental rules because they were crafted by the
evolution of the species. These aspects of mind are our common heritage.
They are variable in biological time, but not in historical time. They cannot
be expected to change much, if at all, over a relatively short span of time
such as five or six thousand years. But over longer stretches, say 100,000
years, they are more malleable. Let a few million years pass and they are
more malleable still. The more malleable ideas and mental rules seem less
like Kantian categories and more like the products of induction. They are
parts of the organism’s ‘‘map’’ and thus seem ‘‘a priori,’’ but they emerge
from personal or cultural history and thus seem ‘‘a posteriori.’’ Nishiyama
(1984) argues that Hayek breaks down the very distinction between a priori
and a posteriori.
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
31
For Kant, ‘‘necessity and strict universality’’ are the ‘‘infallible tests for
distinguishing’’ knowledge a priori from knowledge a posteriori (Kant, 1787,
p. 26 (Section 2 of ‘‘Introduction’’)). But if Hayek’s theory of mind is right,
then what we know a priori might be false or at least contingent. The
qualitative distinction between green and red, for example, reflects nothing
in the spectrum of visible light. The stick in the water looks bent, though we
know it is not.
A third example shows that our ‘‘knowledge’’ may exist in unexpected
forms. Different cultures have different incest taboos. But some prohibitions
seem to be universal, including the prohibition of intercourse between siblings.10 The psychological mechanism that enforces the taboo is imperfect,
however. Sufficient proximity between very young children will prevent
them from acquiring sexual desires for each other later in life. Children
raised together on Israeli kibbutzim almost never marry. We ‘‘know’’ that it
is dangerous to produce offspring with people whom we were in very close
contact at early ages. This ‘‘knowledge,’’ however, is not perfectly correct.
Failure to cross the pons asinorum of The Sensory Order is only one of
several errors of Hayek’s interpretation. We address four additional misinterpretations below.
3.2. Misinterpretation ii: The Sensory Order is not Subjectivist
A ‘‘subjectivist’’ traces all explanation in the social sciences back to the
‘‘subjective’’ mental states of social actors. These subjective states are not
necessarily the only causes at work. Other factors certainly enter. The subjectivist, however, always checks to be sure that his theories and models are
consistent with a normal human understanding of real people. Would a real
person really do that? If so, the theory might be true. If the theory imputes
to anyone implausible thoughts, motives, or actions, then the theory is rejected as false or improbable.
It is sometimes argued that in The Sensory Order Hayek abandoned subjectivism or at least adopted a weaker form of it. Caldwell (2004a, p. 362),
for example, argues that Hayek’s evolutionary turn in the 1950s involved his
de-emphasizing or even displacing methodological dualism by complexity
theory.11 In this interpretation, The Sensory Order marks Hayek’s move out
of a relatively hermeneutic subjectivism to which he had been increasingly
turning and into a distinct ‘‘scientific subjectivism’’ (p. 260) based on his
theory of complexity. Caldwell (2004b, p. 249) explains that Hayek reacted
to the criticisms by Nagel and Popper of his ‘‘scientism’’ essays by moving
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WILLIAM N. BUTOS AND ROGER G. KOPPL
away from methodological dualism to the simple versus complex division.
He did so because ‘‘(Hayek’s) earlier distinction, based on the traditional
natural science – social science division, did not fit well with the prevailing
philosophy of science of the day.’’ This methodological issue is briefly addressed below (see Section 3.3), but suffice it to say here that while we agree
that Hayek’s interests did indeed turn toward the theory of complexly
organized phenomena, there is no compelling evidence suggesting that
Hayek rejected methodological dualism or, indeed, that such a rejection is
required. In fact, once we accept that mind is itself a self-organizing complex
phenomenon, we have to acknowledge that our theories of agency and social
phenomena cannot pretend to somehow ‘‘reduce’’ subjective descriptions of
human action to ‘‘objective’’ descriptions. Doing so would require us to
assume that individuals are nothing more than simple clockwork automatons whose subjective states might well be represented by simple algorithms. As Koppl (2005, p. 389) points out: ‘‘What Hayek discovered with
complexity was not a path out of methodological dualism and into science,
but a scientific defense of methodological dualism.’’
The Sensory Order may seem to deviate from subjectivism because of its
scientific style and purpose. If the reader will stay with it until the end,
however, he will discover a ringing endorsement of subjectivism in the
book’s final chapter on ‘‘philosophical consequences.’’ There, Hayek
(1952a, p. 192) explicitly defends ‘‘verstehende psychology.’’ ‘‘In the study
of human action,’’ Hayek says, ‘‘our starting point will always have to be
the direct knowledge’’ of ‘‘mental events’’ (p. 191). We ‘‘use our direct
(‘introspective’) knowledge of mental events in order to ‘understand,’ and in
some measure even to predict, the results to which mental processes will lead
in certain conditions’’ (p. 192). Hayek calls this an ‘‘introspective psychology’’ which takes ‘‘our direct knowledge of the human mind for its starting
point’’ (p. 192). Hayek could hardly be more explicit or more thoroughly
subjectivist.
3.3. Misinterpretation iii: The Sensory Order Violates Methodological
Individualism
Barry Smith (1997) and others have argued that Hayek’s theory of mind is
inconsistent with methodological individualism. In Hayek’s psychology,
Smith believes, there is no ‘‘room for planning, for self-control and for the
deliberate self-shaping of the conscious subject.’’ Hayek breaks ‘‘the
connection y between reason, choice and action.’’
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
33
Smith seems to neglect Hayek’s (1952a, pp. 191–194) explicit defense of
methodological dualism. ‘‘The conclusion to which our theory leads,’’
Hayek argues, is that although the mental activity is ‘‘produced by the same
principles which we know to operate in the physical world, we shall never be
able fully to explain [them] in terms of physical laws’’ (p. 191). In some
sense, perhaps, Hayek’s theory is ‘‘reductionist.’’ But it shows us that any
reduction of the mental to the physical can be made only ‘‘in principle.’’ We
cannot describe thought and action without using words such as ‘‘plan’’ and
‘‘purpose.’’ The concluding paragraph of The Sensory Order may be worth
quoting in full.
Our conclusion, therefore, must be that to us mind must remain forever a realm of its
own which we can know only through directly experiencing it, but which we shall never
be able fully to explain or to ‘reduce’ to something else. Even though we may know that
mental events of the kind which we experience can be produced by the same forces which
operate in the rest of nature, we shall never be able to say which are the particular
physical events which ‘correspond’ to a particular mental event. (1952a, p. 194)
Hayek’s methodological dualism vindicates our use of the language of
planning and purpose, which Smith curiously imagines to be inconsistent
with Hayek’s theory of mind.
Perhaps Smith and others have neglected Hayek’s discussion of ‘‘Mechanical and Purposive Behaviour’’ (Hayek, 1952a, pp. 122–127). The point
of this discussion is that the sort of system he describes will not behave in a
‘‘mechanical’’ way even though each principle of its operation looks perfectly ‘‘mechanical’’ in isolation. A system’s behavior is ‘‘mechanical’’ if it
responds in similar ways to similar stimuli.12 Your car always goes forward
in drive; it never ‘‘decides’’ to go backwards. A mechanism, Hayek points
out ‘‘cannot ‘purposively’ adapt its operations to produce different results in
the same external conditions.’’ A mechanism ‘‘is essentially ‘passive’’’ because its actions depend only on ‘‘external circumstance’’ (Hayek, 1952a, p.
122). People and many other animals are not mechanisms. They learn new
behaviors. They make similar responses to dissimilar stimuli and dissimilar
responses to similar stimuli. This extra-mechanical behavior is just what you
would expect from a system built on the ‘mechanical’ principles Hayek
describes. Such a system, Hayek (1952a, pp. 122–123) explains, ‘‘will, as a
result of its own operations, continuously change its structure and alter the
range of operation of which it is capable.’’ Indeed, continues Hayek, it ‘‘will
scarcely ever respond twice in exactly the same manner to the same external
conditions.’’ It will learn ‘‘entirely new actions’’ and look ‘‘self-adaptive and
purposive.’’ It will be ‘‘active’’ because ‘‘the character of its operations’’ at
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WILLIAM N. BUTOS AND ROGER G. KOPPL
any point in time will be determined by both ‘‘the pre-existing state of its
internal processes’’ and ‘‘the external influences on it.’’
In an adaptive system of the sort Hayek describes, ‘‘mechanical’’ principles of operation produce non-mechanical behaviors in part because the
system engages in multiple classification of its environment. Each stimulus
invokes many responses, some of which may be mutually incompatible. The
system typically executes a self-consistent subset of them, which subset is
determined by a process of higher-level reclassification. Each novel subset
represents a new action for system. The system’s ‘‘model’’ adapts in
response to experience. This adaptation causes the ‘‘same’’ stimulus to produce one response on one occasion, another response on another occasion.
The child tries to touch the flame once, but not twice. This underscores the
fact that The Sensory Order offers a theory of learning in the sense of an
individual’s ability to adapt to the external environment and in the sense of
his capacity to generate new knowledge about the environment.13
3.4. Misinterpretation iv: The Sensory Order Describes Ontogenetic
Development, not Phylogenetic Development
Many scholars neglect the role of biological evolution in Hayek’s psychology. Smith (1997) and Khalil (2002) are examples. They imagine that the
connections and classifications Hayek describes are a result of ontogenetic
development only. They are, however, the result of both phylogeny and
ontogeny. Here again, Hayek has been perfectly explicit.
Hayek’s (1952a) brief statement of his theory comes in his second chapter,
‘‘An Outline of the Theory.’’ The fifth and last section of that chapter is
entitled, ‘‘The Central Thesis.’’ There, Hayek says explicitly that the system
of connections to which he appeals in explaining the sensory order ‘‘is acquired in the course of the development of the species and the individual by
a kind of ‘experience’ or ‘learning’; and that it reproduces, therefore, at
every stage of its development certain relationships existing in the physical
environment’’ (p. 53). The structure of mental life is determined by both
phylogenetic and ontogenetic development.
If we recall that the immediate object of Hayek’s study is, again, the
sensory order, the role of biological evolution is clear. The sensory order
that gives us sights and sounds obviously depends on the existence of specialized organs such as eyes and ears. These are products of phylogeny.14
Hayek refers to biological evolution throughout the book. He thinks it
likely, for example, ‘‘that, in the course of evolution, the original direct
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
35
connections between particular stimuli and particular responses are being
preserved, but that control mechanisms are being superimposed capable of
inhibiting or modifying these direct responses’’ (Hayek, 1952a, p. 85). If they
are sufficiently complex, the operation of such ‘‘control mechanisms’’ is
called ‘‘thought’’! Parallel to this mental development ‘‘a similar organization will operate on the motor side’’ (p. 86).
The impression that Hayek refers only to ontogeny and not phylogeny
may owe something to the fact that Hayek is not interested in determining
how much weight to give each factor. At the time Hayek was writing, there
were probably insufficient grounds for deciding the relative importance of
phylogeny and ontogeny in determining mental function. As Hayek (1952a,
pp. 102–103) says:
But as we are concerned with the genesis of mind as such, it is comparatively unimportant what for the individual are constitutional and what are experiential factors;
indeed, it is at least likely that what for one species or at one developmental stage may be
of experiential origin, may in other instances be constitutionally determined. What is
important for our purposes is that it would appear that the principle which determines
the formation of the mental order may operate either in the ontogenetic or in phylogenetic process.
As this passage suggests, Hayek dodges the issue because its resolution does
not alter the fundamentals of his theory.
3.5. Misinterpretation v: The Sensory Order Explains Personal Paradigms
Khalil (2002) suggests that Hayek’s cognitive theory is about the development of ‘‘personal paradigms.’’ Hayek did recognize that different people
have different mental maps and models. This follows from the simple fact
that individual experience plays a role in shaping them. But we believe it is
worth remembering that the book’s title refers to the sensory order, not to
‘‘personal paradigms.’’ According to Khalil (2002, p. 334), the role of such
paradigms is to ‘‘fashion sensory input after itself’’ in that ‘‘cognition partially depends on one’s mental matrix or one’s world view.’’ While Khalil is
correct to note that the ‘‘mind is not a mirror,’’ he claims that ‘‘the mind
appropriates the world according to already made classes of objects and
relations.’’
The infelicity of his terminology becomes apparent once we recognize that
The Sensory Order provides a way to understand cognitive functioning as
the operation of an adaptive classifier system (see below, Section 4.4). That
is, it describes a system that engages in self-organizing activity that
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reconstructs those classes of objects and relations in response to external
stimuli and the correspondence of such activity with a changing external
environment. We are not aware of The Sensory Order describing this process
as one that depends on an individual’s ‘‘world view.’’
Hayek’s cognitive theory explains how we could all have the same basic
mental structure. We have the same biological history. As we have seen
earlier, Hayek’s theory redeems ‘‘verstehende psychology.’’ We can understand each other because we have more or less the same mental make up.
Hayek’s cognitive theory supports an argument against ‘‘polylogism,’’ the
doctrine that different cultures have different logics.
4. OK, I’VE READ THE SENSORY ORDER. NOW
WHAT?
4.1. The Sensory Order and the Hayekian Research Program
Credit for the resuscitation of The Sensory Order should probably be given
to Walter B. Weimer (1979). From his perspective as a cognitive psychologist, Weimer drew attention to the theoretical coherence of Hayek’s
psychology and, as importantly, identified its methodological and epistemological significance in terms of broader social theory. Despite the recognition Hayek’s cognitive theory has received from outside economics by
scholars such as Nobel Laureate Gerald Edelman, Joaquin Fuster, and
Edward Boring, its influence for researchers in economics and the social
sciences must be described as tangential at best. It is certainly true that we
have witnessed a recent explosion in America and Europe of ‘‘Hayek studies.’’ And this renewed interest in Hayek’s work has sustained a research
program that continues to yield advances in our understanding of many
areas in social theory. As astonishing as this Hayekian renaissance has been,
however, the significance of his cognitive work for the social sciences seems
far less established. We believe that this lacuna (or possibly neglect) within
the social sciences is surprising and unwarranted.
Leland Yeager’s (1984) short essay highlighting certain connections between The Sensory Order and The Road to Serfdom was probably the earliest
published treatment of its kind from the rank of economists. Unfortunately,
it seems to have had no real impact on other economists. By the early 1990s,
however, a few researchers (apparently unaware of Yeager’s article) published papers that indicated a newly emerging appreciation for Hayek’s
cognitive work (see, e.g., Streit, 1993; Butos & Koppl, 1993). Since then, a
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
37
steady but small stream of papers have been published on Hayek’s cognitive
theory. The principal paths of this work concern insights from The Sensory
Order for methodological issues (e.g., Birner, 1999), the theory of economic
expectations, and more recently the mind and market as Hayekian adaptive
classifier systems.15
4.2. Observations on the Methodological Ramifications of The Sensory
Order
Hayek wrote extensively on the methodology of the social sciences and even
though an account of that work is beyond our purview here, some general
remarks seem to be in order. His Counter-Revolution of Science (Hayek,
1952b), which is perhaps his most important work in this area, brought to
the fore the special kinds of problems social science inquiry presents. The
book principally explores the pitfalls of scientific approaches in which
methods suitable for the study of phenomena in the hard sciences (such as
physics) are erroneously thought to also apply to social phenomena. One of
Hayek’s most enduring insights was to connect scientism, which he argued
constituted a methodological abuse of reason, with constructivist rationalism, which he considered a flawed epistemological position about the
individual’s capacity to know.16 This enabled him to produce an integrated
and compelling philosophical position regarding the possibilities and limits
of what social scientists and social reformers are likely to achieve; it also
provided Hayek a platform from which to argue for the often neglected
advantages of spontaneous, self-organizing liberal institutions. The critical
advance made by The Sensory Order in regard to Hayek’s philosophical
position is that it establishes a cognitive basis for the epistemological argument against constructivist rationalism and also for the methodological
argument against scientism.
The Sensory Order is a multi-dimensioned and complicated work that
speaks to a variety of insights. Earlier, we referred to it as a response to the
mind–body problem. But on another level it can be seen as a cognitively
based theory of epistemology in which constraints on individual knowledge
form a principal motif. As noted above in Section 2, Hayek argues that in
the mental realm what we know about the external world is an interpretation
constructed by our cognitive classificatory apparatus. Sensory inputs are
channeled by a ‘‘system of rules’’ that arrange these inputs to form a stable
(yet mutable) structure of connected, lattice-like pathways. Because these
inputs are classified according to pre-existing categories, their meaning is
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necessarily relational in terms of certain qualities its shares with previous
inputs and not with the characteristics of external things in and of themselves. That is, in Hayek’s theory we can never know things as they really
are, but only in terms of the categories we have inherited from our biological
development and those we have individually formed experientially. For
Hayek, then, precise yet unspecifiable constraints exist on what an individual cognitively can know, and these constraints, reflecting the relational
quality of perception and the very structure of the classificatory categories,
enter at the foundational level of cognitive functioning.
The epistemological basis for Hayek’s constraints on knowledge argument also emerges from his argument that knowledge is embedded in tacit
rules. Recalling that for Hayek knowledge is an interpretation generated
from the classificatory functioning of the mind, the sorting rules that govern
the pathways along which any sensory input will be channeled are integral
to overall cognitive functioning. As we consider higher order mental activity, the rules governing these processes must themselves become more complex and nuanced. Hayek’s argument requires that as a logical matter these
rules must at some point become tacit or inarticulable. For all skilled
operations, from piano playing to pitching a baseball to generating new
ideas, cognitive functioning involves repertoires so deeply internalized that
the performer cannot fully describe them or provide an account of how the
observed behaviors are actually produced. The concert pianist’s fingers fly
across the keyboard in ways they could not happen if each note were
consciously played. The everyday observed manifestations of tacit knowledge, like riding a bicycle or the intuitive shortcuts medical diagnosticians
sometimes excel at, reflect the constitutionally constrained ability of our
mind to fully explain itself. Hayek’s argument of the division of knowledge
in the context of how markets work and of alternative institutional arrangements (such as central planning) is justly famous. Less well understood, however, is the particular innovation of The Sensory Order in
establishing the significance of such constraints at the cognitive level. In
doing so, Hayek provided an argument that carries important implications
for the limits on what we as individuals can know and explain.
In terms of the explanatory power of the social sciences, Hayek maintained that for phenomena in this realm, the best we can do is to garner
predictions of patterns. The physical sciences, Hayek pointed out, enjoyed
the capacity to produce highly precise predictions of the values of variables
not because they were more advanced, but because the phenomena they
dealt with were simpler than those of the social sciences. This insight, as
noted earlier, lead Hayek to rail against the hubris of the social sciences in
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
39
trying to cloak themselves in the mantle of the physical sciences. These
methodological precepts provided Hayek with a strong integrating argument permeating much of his social theory. In addition to the implications
of the constraints on knowledge argument for comparative institutional
analysis, it is also clear that strong linkages exist between his methodology
(and its foundation within The Sensory Order) and his interest in complexly
organized adaptive phenomena.
4.3. The Sensory Order and Expectations17
Hayek’s cognitive theory provides an account of the generation of knowledge that permits the individual to achieve a closer fit with external reality.
At the same time, it sustains a perspective in which creativity and novelty are
essential aspects of cognitive functioning. Thus, the flip side of the Hayekian
‘‘constraints on knowledge’’ argument is one in which cognitive activity
encompasses emergent properties similar to all adaptive-classifier systems.18
This aspect of The Sensory Order carries implications for applications in
economic theory.
In terms of the knowledge constraining perspective typically associated
with Hayek, the cognitive problem Hayek sets out to resolve is identical to the
social problem he has addressed over the years: how do complex phenomena
like the mind and markets resolve inherent limitations on knowledge?
In the cognitive domain the individual’s construction of a coherent interpretation of reality, both as it is and as it might be, emerges from rules
governing the operation of the mind. This interpretation, as Hayek points
out, is incomplete and thus the behaviors it supports will not generate full
conformity and compatibility with the environment. The ‘‘restlessness’’
which motivates action thus has an epistemological basis in Hayek and helps
to bring into sharper relief the necessity of learning and acting by trial and
error. The Hayekian view of expectation formation (unlike Simon’s)
emphasizes the individual as a complex phenomenon functioning in a complex social environment. And in both domains the order that emerges is a
byproduct of the rules that are followed.
The main elements of a Hayekian theory of expectations involve four
central points. First, expectations are formed in the context of ignorance
about reality. The epistemological uncertainty in Hayek’s theory is not
simply (and in some sense, trivially) a result of uni-directional calendar time,
as emphasized by Shackle and Lachmann, but also a result of abstract and
inherent constraints on what can be known cognitively. The mind constructs
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WILLIAM N. BUTOS AND ROGER G. KOPPL
a representation of the external world that is necessarily incomplete. Second,
an individual’s expectations derive from a knowledge-generating classificatory apparatus. The mind constructs theories of reality by organizing and
interpreting sensory data. Such rules operate at the conscious and tacit levels
of cognitive activity. Expectations are formed as a result of rule-governed
creativity.
The third element of Hayekian expectations is that cognitive activity
functions as a mechanism of adaptation. A ‘‘goodness of fit’’ criterion permits the individual to appraise the usefulness of theories of reality and the
expectations they generate. Disappointed expectations induce revision. Expectations are self-corrective and forward-looking in that inappropriate expectations at the individual level are subject to a weeding out process. And
fourth, expectations are formed endogenously as a necessary consequence of
the role which sensory inputs play in Hayek’s cognitive theory. Hayek’s
theory does not cast individuals as cognitive islands who can step outside
themselves epistemologically or divorce themselves cognitively from the
wider social reality they not only inhabit but to which they must also adapt.
Thus, expectations will ordinarily correspond to the habits, practices, norms,
and traditions of the society or, in other words, to the social rules governing
action. For Hayek, these rules are products of social and even, in the case of
the sensory order, biological evolution. In this evolutionary view, actions and
expectations have a tendency toward coherence and coordination.
Our discussion has attempted only to outline in a highly abstract manner
the general principles of a Hayekian theory of expectations. If, as has been
argued above, expectations are rules of action geared toward an individual’s
successful adaptation to the environment, then the rules that are selected
and employed will bear some correspondence to the environment. Individuals’ expectations and behaviors are thus situationally endogenized by
virtue of individuals adapting behavior to the existing ‘‘filtering conditions’’
or social rules of the game. Consequently, market outcomes will be
generated that are not only unintended but, depending on these filtering
conditions, also may be disorderly and arguably undesirable (see Butos and
Koppl, 1993, 1997).
4.4. Knowledge-Generating and Adaptive Classifier Systems
As we have seen, The Sensory Order provides an account of a particular
adaptive classifier system – the central nervous system – that produces a
classification over a changing field of sensory inputs. Other systems may be
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
41
analyzed in similar terms. In particular, the market economy may be viewed
as an adaptive classifier system. In using the term ‘‘adaptive classifier system,’’ we are extending John Holland’s (1976a,b, 1992) conception of ‘‘classifier systems’’ which refers to ‘‘a vehicle for using genetic algorithms in
studies of machine learning’’ (1992, p. 171). Yet, there are relevant distinctions to be maintained between an adaptive classifier system as used to
describe the central nervous system and those adaptive systems of interest to
researchers in artificial intelligence. As noted by McQuade (2006, p. 81),
Holland is ‘‘dealing with systems whose adaptive capability y arises because its components are subject to a form of selection’’ whereas adaptive
classifier systems in our sense are those ‘‘in which the component interactions result, as a side effect, in a form of structural self-organization that is
the basis for the adaptive capability.’’ We use the term for any set of interacting elements that may be reasonably thought of as forming an adapting system with defined capacities for learning.
Adaptive classifier systems can be studied from the perspective of the
knowledge they generate and embody. In this connection, Hayek’s theory of
mind contains two related but distinct elements: first, our knowledge of the
external world is always an interpretation and second, this knowledge has
been constructed by the brain. The former draws attention to the inevitably
of our ignorance, i.e., the idea that necessary, though unspecifiable, constraints exist on what we can know, while the latter highlights the generative
properties of cognitive functioning as a creative process capable of exhibiting emergent characteristics. Both elements, we hold, are essential for developing a fuller appreciation of the richness of Hayek’s contributions. In
particular, we wish to suggest that the fecundity of The Sensory Order in this
latter sense has not yet been fully grasped by Hayekian scholars and social
theorists and thus remains one of the important underdeveloped areas of
Hayek scholarship.19
As noted earlier, The Sensory Order provides an account of a particular
adaptive-classifier system. The specific form and character of this classification depends in Hayek’s theory on the configuration of the pathways and
sorting mechanisms by which the brain organizes itself. But this classificatory structure enjoys a certain plasticity or mutability that reflects the
capacity for adaptive responses by the individual in the face of the perceived
external environment. Positive and negative feedback helps to maintain a
rough consistency between behavior and the actual environment. The way
an individual responds to external conditions is fully dependent upon the
particular classifications he generates, which is to say that for Hayek individual knowledge is the adaptive response of an individual based on the
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classification the brain has generated. In short, sensory inputs are transformed via the mechanisms of the brain into an output – a particular classification that we call knowledge embodied in adaptive behavior.
For human cognitive functioning, we also recognize that this process
(though necessarily involving in Hayek’s theory tacit rules and mechanisms),
has the capacity for self-conscious and reflective activity, thus providing
substantial scope for critical, argumentative, and self-reordering properties.
Thus, the implicit story contained in The Sensory Order is that individuals
are not mere processors of information, passively responding to stimuli.
Instead, Hayek teaches us that cognitive activity, despite being constrained
by rules and its own physiology, should be understood as an active, inputtransforming, knowledge-generating adaptive system. The cognitive
problem Hayek deals with is not about how knowledge is harvested or
discovered, but with the process of its generation. While Hayek’s treatment
of the knowledge problem in the catallactic domain clearly emphasized the
discovery and use of decentralized knowledge, his treatment of knowledge in
his cognitive work should be seen as an account of its generation. The
intriguing question that The Sensory Order raises is whether its insights can
be applied to the social domain.
This might be approached by noting that specific capacities for classification and the possibility for higher cognitive functions obviously differ
across different kinds of organisms and, thus, for different kinds of adaptive-classifier systems. The suggestion being advanced here, then, is really
twofold: first, it seems sensible to recognize that the capacity to produce
knowledge in the sense of generating a classification over a range of inputs is
not a uniquely human characteristic, and second, that we should expect
classificatory capacities to differ across entities dependent on their structure,
complexity, and other characteristics associated with their adaptive capabilities (see Kaufman, 2000, pp. 114–116). As Plotkin (1994, p. 229) notes:
‘‘The fleshy water-conserving cactus stem constitutes a form of knowledge
of the scarcity of water in the world of the cactus.’’ Once we move beyond a
conception of knowledge in our social science that confines its significance
to human cognitive functioning, a pathway opens up that helps us to understand social orders from a perspective rooted in the theory of complex
adaptive systems, or more specifically of the theory of ‘‘knowledge-generating orders.’’ This approach is entirely consistent with Hayek’s cognitive
theory by virtue of associating knowledge with adaptive responses and has
been developed with particular insight by Thomas McQuade’s work on
adaptive classifier systems and knowledge-generating orders (see McQuade,
2000, 2005; McQuade & Butos, 2005).20
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
43
Such a conception sees the production of knowledge as an emergent
property of adaptive systems and contingent on the context from which it
was generated. The human mind is one such system and it produces a
particular kind of knowledge specific to it. But other kinds of adaptive
systems, from relatively simple ones (such as the cactus Plotkin mentions) to
the more complex (such as the human mind) will be expected to generate
different kinds of knowledge depending on their structures and functional
properties. Accordingly, it would seem useful to model different kinds of
knowledge-generating orders for the purpose of analyzing their capacities
for generating knowledge of a particular kind and other adaptive and
emergent properties. Of particular interest to economists is the market order, understood as a framework for agent interaction under certain institutional arrangements regarding the exchange of property rights in which a
particular kind of classification is generated as market outcomes, principally
in the form of prices. The opportunity would seem to exist to apply this
‘‘sensory order’’ perspective to the analysis of different social arrangements
and structures beyond the typical Austrian question of the discovery and use
of knowledge and toward questions concerning the generation of knowledge
understood as emergent characteristics of such social structures (see, for
example, ‘‘Big Player’’ theory in Koppl, 2002; Koppl & Yeager, 1996).
Within the social realm, complex routines and feedback mechanisms require
us to see such orders as not simply aggregations of agents and their capacities, but as involving a transformation of individual knowledge into a
unique kind of social knowledge that could not have been otherwise produced. One way to state this is to observe that only the market order can
generate market prices. This points to a different approach in understanding
the role and implications of different institutional arrangements, but it is an
approach very much in keeping with insights gleaned from Hayek’s cognitive theory.
4.5. Further Developments: The Economics of the Mind
Salvatore Rizzello’s The Economics of the Mind (1999) is perhaps the
first full length study that explores the cognitive approach to economics
from a perspective explicitly based on what he calls the ‘‘neurobiological’’
work of Hayek and the ‘psychological’’ analysis of Simon. In calling
for a reappraisal of Hayek’s The Sensory Order in terms of deepening our
understanding of individual rationality and behavior, the role and formation of institutions, and the economics of path-dependency, Rizzello
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provides yet another voice from within the ranks of contemporary economists that draws on Hayek’s cognitive theory. In particular, he has been
inspired to explore the ‘‘economics of complexity, creativity, and uncertainty, i.e., the economics of the mind’’ (p. 168). Rizzello aims to use cognitive theory to provide a more carefully worked theory of agency and then
to use that platform to construct (or modify) an economics suitable for
studying organizations, institutions, and market processes in an evolutionary context.21
We are encouraged by Rizzello’s work and the impetus it is likely to
provide for applying Hayek’s cognitive theory to economics. Identifying and
especially demonstrating the usefulness of such connections has proven
difficult and the work that has been done in this regard has often been met
with skepticism from other Hayekian scholars.22 All the same, the ongoing
work of Rizzello and others has without question added a far richer texture
to our understanding of the individual than available from mainstream
work. The fault lines, it seems to us, principally occupy those intersections
where the objective is to move beyond the level of the individual to that of
many interacting individuals and the institutions that arise at such levels.
While there are, as Rizzello and others suggest, connections and analogies
between a cognitive-based theory of the individual and the social nexus, the
precise ways that such connections matter and the implications they carry
for social theory are not as clearly spelled out yet. Thus, in following Rizzello, although we may identify in Hayek’s work a kind of ‘‘cognitive pathdependency’’ arising from the interactions between the relatively fixed
‘‘map’’ and the more fluid ‘‘model,’’ it is not quite obvious why we require
this theory to understand market level path-dependence or, more generally,
how the cognitive theory specifically generates a coherent theory of social
institutions.23 As Hayek himself argued, we enter a far more complex realm
once we move from an isolated individual to many interacting individuals.
The analytical problems this creates for the social theorist are not
aggregative or additive ones, but perhaps ones best understood as problems in complexity, whereby complex minds with the capacity to generate
emergent characteristics interact in various ways and in so doing generate
highly complex structures and institutions also having emergent characteristics. That economists interested in such questions should also have available an articulated and increasingly well-regarded literature from cognitive
psychology is simply a fortuitous byproduct of the fertility of Hayekian
ideas, ideas whose full impact in this area is probably not yet fully realized.
Much work, in short, remains to be done.
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
45
5. CONCLUSION
It has been over a quarter of a century since the second ‘‘Hayekian Revolution’’ was jump-started with his award of the Nobel Prize in Economics.
The renewed interest in Hayek has been a worldwide phenomenon, attracting a large and steady flow of scholarly articles, books, and conferences
from economists and other social scientists. Strangely, The Sensory Order,
what may be one of Hayek’s more prescient contributions, remains generally underappreciated. We do not offer an explanation for this neglect,
noting that even the highly acclaimed recent study of Hayek by Bruce Caldwell (2004a) also sees its economic significance largely confined to certain
methodological problems. We believe, contrary to this mainstream view,
that current Hayekians are wrong to think that the value-added of Hayek’s
cognitive theory has been more or less fully realized. In this paper we have
tried to highlight what we take to be the principal seminal contributions of
The Sensory Order.
In doing so, we hope to have clarified some directions in which Hayek’s
insights may be further developed. There may be others. Our emphasis on
Hayekian expectations originates from our firm belief that any theory of the
market process requires some kind of articulated theory of learning. In the
absence of same, it seems difficult, if not ad hoc, to make claims about the
conditions under which markets will tend or not tend toward the coordination of individual plans. While it is certainly possible that other theories
of learning may contribute to our understanding of the market process,
Hayek’s approach seems well-suited to addressing such matters at the cognitive level, as opposed for example to those, such as ones based on
Popperian insights, that view learning from a methodological vantage point.
We have also suggested that Hayek’s cognitive theory provides an explicit
model of a knowledge-generating order. This carries potentially important
implications in two senses. First, it requires viewing individual agency in
decidedly active terms. Once we begin to conceive of individuals with
knowledge-generating capacities, human behavior can no longer be viewed
in simply passive and responsive terms. In moving to the social level, the
idea of a cognitive knowledge-generating order at the individual level has an
analogous counterpart in understanding the market process as a uniquely
price-generating order. This perspective seems especially useful for the comparative institutional analysis of systems that differ with respect to their
capacities for generating market-level knowledge in the form of prices,
quantities, and other economically relevant characteristics.
46
WILLIAM N. BUTOS AND ROGER G. KOPPL
More than his mentor Ludwig von Mises, Hayek engaged in constructive
and sometimes heated debate with academics and intellectuals of his time. In
doing so, he situated himself at the center of some of the great debates of the
twentieth century, including controversies in the areas of business cycle theory, capital theory, socialist calculation and central planning, and monetary
theory. Hayek’s fortunes waxed and waned throughout these episodes. But
now Hayek’s contributions in the areas which we have discussed in this paper
may provide a renewed appreciation for his role in the further development
of economics. From many quarters the increased interest within the profession in questions of rationality, social institutions, and evolutionary and
cognitive economics may well profit from a Hayekian perspective. If so, what
Koppl (2002) has referred to as an ‘‘emerging new orthodoxy’’ in economics
may well be an enduring legacy of the second Hayekian revolution.
NOTES
1. Simon (1955). Also see Sections VII and VIII in Simon (1982).
2. This growing group of scholars includes Daniel Kahneman, Gerd Girgenzer,
Reinhard Selten, Brian Arthur, Brian Loasby, Douglas North, and Vernon Smith.
Also see note 15 below.
3. Several parts of this section borrow from Butos and Koppl (1993), Koppl
(1999), and Koppl (2002). Also see McQuade and Butos (2005).
4. Hayek considers the physical order to be ‘‘objective’’ and the phenomenal
order to be only a ‘‘first approximation’’ of this ‘‘objective world.’’ This does not
mean, however, that the physical order comprises qualities or structures somehow
‘‘given’’ to us. For Hayek, what we know about external reality is problematic and
necessarily fallible. Moreover, Hayek says, ‘‘By saying that there ‘exists’ an ‘objective’ world different from the phenomenal world we are merely stating that it is
possible to construct an order or classification of events which is different from that
which our senses show us and which enables us to give a more consistent account of
the behaviour of the different events in that world’’ (1952a, p. 173).
5. To be consistent with modern biology, we should speak of ‘‘inclusive fitness,’’
not differential reproductive success.
6. Referring to the model and the map, Hayek says, ‘‘it will be the position of the
former within the latter pattern which will determine the significance of the new
impulses’’ (1952a, p. 116).
7. As McQuade and Butos (2005, p. 337) put it: ‘‘The network of connections (of
varying strengths) between the component neurons, which changes as a long-term
result of the stimulus-induced patterns of activity, effectively functions as a ‘map’ of
the environment as experienced in the past in that it enables the emergence, from a
given stimulus, of an induced pattern of impulses characteristic of that stimulus and
of other potential stimuli which have accompanied the given stimulus in the past.
This pattern of impulses generated in the map by the current stimuli is, therefore, a
‘model’ of the environment as currently experienced.’’
Does The Sensory Order have a Useful Economic Future?
47
8. Let S be any set, whether finite or infinite. Let P(S) be the set of all subsets of S,
including the empty set and S itself. P(S) is the power set of S. Cantor’s diagonal
argument shows that P(S) is larger than S in the sense that no function from S to P(S)
can cover all elements in P(S). Imagine we had such a function, f, and consider the set
W in P(S) such that wAW iff w ef(w). Let t ¼ f1(W), that is, f(t) ¼ W. If tAW, then,
by virtue of the defining property of W, teW. But if teW, then, by that same defining
property of W, tAW. Thus, tAW iff teW, a contradiction. We conclude that no
function from S to P(S) can cover P(S). In this sense, the power set of any set is
always bigger that the original set; it has a greater ‘‘cardinality.’’
9. Among the many introductions and overviews the reader might consult, see
‘‘The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy’’ article on Kant’s metaphysics, available
at http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/k/kantmeta.htm.
10. The sibling marriages between Ancient Egyptian leaders does not seem to be a
genuine counter-example.
11. Vanberg (2004) also cites Hayek (1952a) in arguing that Hayek rejected methodological dualism. Unlike Caldwell, however, Vanberg provided a definition of the
term and under the definition he chose Hayek was indeed not a methodological
dualist. According to Vanberg, methodological dualism is ‘‘the claim that the
nature of its subject matter, namely purposeful and intentional human action, requires
economics to adopt a methodology that is fundamentally different from the
causal explanatory approach of the natural sciences’’ (Vanberg, 2004, p. 157). We
prefer a milder definition, according to which methodological dualism is simply the
repudiation of any ‘‘reductionism’’ that attempts to link specific actions to specific
‘‘objective’’ causes. We think this is the version of the doctrine defended by Mises and
Hayek.
12. ‘‘By a ‘mechanism’ or a ‘mechanical process’ we usually understand a complex
of moving parts possessing a constant structure which uniquely determines its operations, so that it will always respond in the same manner to a given external
influence, repeat under the same external conditions the same movements, and which
is capable only of a limited number of operations’’ (Hayek, 1952a, p. 122).
13. Butos and Koppl (1999) develop this point to suggest that Kirznerian ‘‘alert
entrepreneurs’’ may be modeled as ‘‘Hayekian learners.’’
14. We do not imply, however, that the organs are sufficient for a sensory order to
exist. See Hayek (1952a, pp. 83, 84).
15. Several other recent developments, which deserve special treatment but which
are not discussed here, suggest increased interest in Hayek’s theory of mind. Vernon
Smith’s Nobel lecture makes extensive reference to it and to the ‘‘neuroeconomics’’ of
Kevin McCabe and others. A widening interest in The Sensory Order is demonstrated
by a 2003 conference sponsored by the American Institute of Economic Research
that brought together scholars from neuroscience, psychology, and economics, including G. Edelman, D. North, V. Smith, R. Posner, and other luminaries to discuss
the contributions of Dewey and Hayek for embodied cognition. The term ‘‘cognitive
economics’’ is used by a group of Italian researchers associated with Salvatore Rizzello, author of The Economics of the Mind (1999). These scholars cite The Sensory
Order as an important foundation for their work.
16. See, for example, Hayek’s essays ‘‘The Theory of Complex Phenomena’’ and
‘‘Rules, Perception and Intelligibility’’ in Hayek (1967) and ‘‘The Errors of
Constructivism’’ and ‘‘The Pretence of Knowledge’’ in Hayek (1978).
48
WILLIAM N. BUTOS AND ROGER G. KOPPL
17. This section draws on more detailed treatments in Butos and Koppl (1993,
1997) and Butos (1996).
18. See Butos and McQuade (2002, p. 123ff). We discuss adaptive classifier systems in greater detail in Section 4.4 below.
19. Thomas McQuade has been instrumental in developing this line of inquiry.
Scholarly treatment of The Sensory Order has principally centered on its relevance
for Hayek’s own development and its connections to his methodology (see, e.g.,
Streit 1993; Birner, l997; Horwitz, 2000; Caldwell, 2004a) in contrast with the
direction pursued by Butos and Koppl (1993); McQuade (2000, 2006) and McQuade
and Butos (2005) that has sought to develop and apply insights of The Sensory Order
to economics.
20. Applications of the mind as a knowledge-generating order are directed toward, respectively, a Kirznerian view of the entrepreneur and the Keynes–Hayek
debate in Butos (2003a, 2003b).
21. Also see Rizzello and Turvani (2000); Rizzello (2004).
22. In commenting on the theory of Hayekian expectations in Butos and Koppl
(1993); Garrison (2001, p. 24) impishly pokes fun at the neurobiological approach
that Rizzello (and others) find useful. As we and Rizzello make clear, the physiochemical processes of cognitive functioning are not germane to questions that
interest economists; instead, the results of those processes in the form of cognitive
outputs, i.e., the classifications that individuals generate, are relevant for economics
for the reasons discussed in the text. This is why Garrison’s flippant, though amusing, critique is irrelevant. Caldwell (2004a), perhaps motivated by an essentially
methodological take on The Sensory Order and despite a favorable tip of the hat to
Rizzello (and the ‘‘neuroeconomics’’ work of Kevin McCabe), is also curiously
hesitant about the relevance of Hayek’s cognitive work for economics, although he
admits that this recent position is different in unnamed ways from earlier beliefs
(see Caldwell, 2004a, p. 270, n. 7).
23. See Rizzello (1999), especially Chapters 3, 11, and 13.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
An earlier version was prepared for presentation to the Max Plank Institute,
Jena on 1 June 2003. We thank Bruce Caldwell, Edward Feser, Geoffrey
Hodgson, Howard Margolis, Thomas McQuade, Gordon Tullock, and an
anonymous referee for helpful suggestions on an earlier draft. The usual
caveat applies.
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