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Hidden Order: The Economics of Everyday Life Paperback – November 20, 2019
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“In David Friedman’s hands, economics becomes a sprightly science. Friedman has the rare knack of introducting fundamental principles with humorous examples. . . . a dazzling array that runs the gamut from supermarkets to pirate ships. . . . A clear picture of how simple assumptions about individual preferences and human rationality can increase our understanding of ordinary market behavior and a wide range of social institutions from marriage, to crime, to voting.”Richard A. Epstein, The University of Chicago Law School“
This book written nearly a decade ago before economics became hot far surpasses its successors such as "Freakonomics." “Amazon reviewer"
The book of the month is HIDDEN ORDER: The Economics of Everyday Life. One doesn't normally think of an economics book as light and pleasant reading, but David makes it seem so. If you have any interest in economics at all, you'll find this book both readable and fascinating; and I guarantee you'll learn something from it." Jerry Pournelle in Byte
“Hidden Order helps us look at everyday experience from the perspective of basic economics. Readers will be surprised to learn how much economics explains about their own behavior as well as about that of others …”James M. Buchanan, Nobel Laureate in Economics, 1986
"The author is a talented teacher, and he moves effortlessly from the traffic jams and grocery stores to the efficient-market hypothesis, price theory, and backward-bending labor curves." —Deborah Stead in The New York Times“
David Friedman's gift is making some of the more complicated concepts of economics simple. In _Hidden Order_, he does this with his trademark wit and ingenuity. The most esoteric yet essential aspects of modern economic thought - marginal utility, indifference curves, opportunity costs, Nash equilibria, rent-seeking, etc - all come to life in this modest paperback.”(Amazon reviewer)
“A surprisingly lucid and useful book, and about as appealing as economics gets." — Kirkus ReviewsBooknotes Interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q6_kYven-0c
- Print length350 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateNovember 20, 2019
- Dimensions6 x 0.88 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101708968121
- ISBN-13978-1708968120
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Product details
- Publisher : Independently published (November 20, 2019)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 350 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1708968121
- ISBN-13 : 978-1708968120
- Item Weight : 1.14 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.88 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,837,192 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #663 in Microeconomics (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

I am an academic economist recently retired after a career first as an economist and then as a law professor; I have never taken a course for credit in either field. My specialty for the past thirty some years, has been the economic analysis of law, the subject of my book _Law's Order_.
I created and taught two new law school seminars at Santa Clara University. One was on legal issues of the 21st century, discussing revolutions that might occur as a result of technological change over the next few decades. Interested readers can find its contents in my _Future Imperfect_. Topics include encryption, genetic engineering, surveillance, and many others. The other seminar was on a variety of unfamiliar legal systems. Topics included the legal systems of modern Romany, Imperial China, Ancient Athens, the Cheyenne Indians, ... . It was the basis for my most recent nonfiction book, _Legal Systems Very Different from Ours_.
I have been involved in recreational medievalism, via the Society for Creative Anachronism, for over fifty years. My interests there include cooking from medieval cookbooks, making medieval jewelry and furniture, telling medieval stories around a campfire, creating a believable medieval Islamic persona, and fighting with sword and shield. My wife and I have self-published two books coming out of that hobby, _A Miscellany_ and _How to Milk an Almond, Stuff an Egg and Armor a Turnip: A Thousand Years of Recipes_.
My involvement with libertarianism goes back even further. I have written on the possibility of replacing government with private institutions to enforce rights and settle disputes, a project sometimes labelled "anarcho-capitalism" and explored in my first book, _The Machinery of Freedom_, first published in 1972 and now in its third edition.
My first novel was _Harald_, published by Baen books. Most of my interests feed into it in one way or another, but it is intended as a story, not a tract on political philosophy, law or economics. It is not exactly a fantasy, since there is no magic, nor quite a historical novel, since the history and geography are invented. The technology and social institutions are based on medieval and classical examples, with one notable exception.
My second novel, _Salamander_, is a fantasy. The setting is about fifty years after the magical equivalent of Newton, the mage who took the first large steps to converting magery from a craft to a science. The plot deals with some of the consequences. I have now published _Brothers_, the sequel to _Salamander_.
My web page, www.daviddfriedman.com, contains the full text of several of my books, most of my published articles, and much else. My blog, Ideas (daviddfriedman.blogspot.com), contains fourteen years worth of essays on a wide variety of subjects.
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