#94 Tom Flanagan: Friedrich Hayek, Spontaneous Order, Markets, Justice, and the Limits of the State
Tom Flanagan explains why we need Hayek's ideas about spontaneous order, institutions, and the limits of state control. Hayek will frustrate central planners and also anarchists. Libertarians can't depend on Hayek; he's too supportive of traditional institutions.
Professor Flanagan has taught a generation of political science students at the University of Calgary. He's informed so much of what the Right assumes in Canada. He's generous, thoughtful, and resists capture into a neat, political box.
Books mentioned:
Grave Error: How The Media Misled Us (and the Truth about Residential Schools) [https://amzn.to/3QyrdwJ]
Dead Wrong: How Canada Got the Residential School Story So Wrong [https://amzn.to/4ebSzCL]
Articles mentioned:
Settler-Neoliberalism: Tom Flanagan and Friedrich Hayek on the Prairies | Canadian Historical Review [https://utppublishing.com/doi/abs/10.3138/chr-2022-0029?journalCode=chr]
Was Hayek a Gnostic? - VoegelinView [https://voegelinview.com/was-hayek-a-gnostic/]
The long reach of the Calgary School | C2C Journal [https://c2cjournal.ca/2018/05/the-long-reach-of-the-calgary-school/]
Let me know what you think!
Thanks again,
Shawn
Chapters and AI summary
Host Shawn Whatley interviews political scientist Tom Flanagan about Friedrich Hayek, focusing on spontaneous order versus top-down organization and the state’s proper role in enforcing rules without directing outcomes. Flanagan explains spontaneous order through examples like language, markets, common law, and even skiing etiquette, and argues modern governments often create chaos by trying to control systems such as Canadian healthcare through price and quantity setting, producing persistent shortages and waitlists. The conversation explores Hayek’s assumptions about property, justice as a feature of fair process and intention rather than outcomes, and practical questions about unintended consequences in politics. Flanagan also discusses Canada’s formation through sovereignty claims, treaties, and force, defending treaty-making as broadly just for its time. He contrasts Hayek’s limits on “spiritual problems” with Voegelin’s strengths and notes he is not an Alberta separatist.
00:00 Hayek In A Nutshell
01:00 Show Intro And Guest
04:56 Flanagan Meets Hayek
06:08 Spontaneous Order Explained
07:02 Language As Emergence
09:50 Markets And Simple Rules
11:55 State Control And Healthcare
16:55 Ski Hill Rules And Enforcement
22:20 Property Justice And Tradition
27:49 Colonialism And Civilizing Mission
30:28 International Anarchy And Empire
35:40 Treaties and Education
36:51 Hayek Order vs Organization
38:16 Canada Built by Force
39:22 Morris and Prairie Treaties
42:03 Mirage of Social Justice
47:55 Intentions vs Outcomes
49:29 Weber and Policy Consequences
56:17 Hayek Meets Voegelin
01:03:13 Spiritual Pathology Politics
01:04:46 State Supports Spontaneous Order
01:08:28 Alberta Separatism and Wrap