This paper supports the effort by Hindriks and Guala (2014) to integrate the prevailing accounts of institutions. I illustrate with traffic narratives how we can think of their concept of rules-in-equilibrium as evolving from universal elementary forms. These conceptions resonate fully with Smith (1759) who saw rule-following conduct as the basis of human sociality and action
Institutions are often regarded either as rules or as equilibria sustained by self-interested agents...
One of HLA Hart’s main contributions to jurisprudence is his theory of social rules. Hart claimed th...
While there is a general acceptance of a broad definition of social institutions as accepted rules o...
This paper supports the effort by Hindriks and Guala (2014) to integrate the prevailing accounts of ...
Chapter explores how rules of conduct (what social scientists call 'norms') are shaped and how they ...
In law as well as in ordinary life, it matters what rules societies have; but what does it mean for...
In this paper I argue against the holistic claim that the description and explanation of human behav...
We propose a new framework to unify three conceptions of institutions that play a prominent role in ...
This edited volume presents the social ontology of institutions. It questions what institutions are,...
There is an influential, and in a sense paradigmatic view in legal philosophy according to which bei...
Instituting poses the question of the organization of human relations in extended groups. Émile Durk...
The informal institutional structure embraces the social norms and moral values of a particular soci...
The paper shows that in an artificial society lawlike rules emerge “as a result of individual action...
This paper explores the role of rules, precedents, and procedures within the structural dimension of...
Like Nelson (2002), I make a case for bringing institutions into evolutionary economics. But unlike ...
Institutions are often regarded either as rules or as equilibria sustained by self-interested agents...
One of HLA Hart’s main contributions to jurisprudence is his theory of social rules. Hart claimed th...
While there is a general acceptance of a broad definition of social institutions as accepted rules o...
This paper supports the effort by Hindriks and Guala (2014) to integrate the prevailing accounts of ...
Chapter explores how rules of conduct (what social scientists call 'norms') are shaped and how they ...
In law as well as in ordinary life, it matters what rules societies have; but what does it mean for...
In this paper I argue against the holistic claim that the description and explanation of human behav...
We propose a new framework to unify three conceptions of institutions that play a prominent role in ...
This edited volume presents the social ontology of institutions. It questions what institutions are,...
There is an influential, and in a sense paradigmatic view in legal philosophy according to which bei...
Instituting poses the question of the organization of human relations in extended groups. Émile Durk...
The informal institutional structure embraces the social norms and moral values of a particular soci...
The paper shows that in an artificial society lawlike rules emerge “as a result of individual action...
This paper explores the role of rules, precedents, and procedures within the structural dimension of...
Like Nelson (2002), I make a case for bringing institutions into evolutionary economics. But unlike ...
Institutions are often regarded either as rules or as equilibria sustained by self-interested agents...
One of HLA Hart’s main contributions to jurisprudence is his theory of social rules. Hart claimed th...
While there is a general acceptance of a broad definition of social institutions as accepted rules o...