Brainpolice:What do you think about the general concept of social evolution and do you think that it has implications for economics and libertarianism? It seems to be that the idea of social evolution and spontaneous order (and by extension, the free market) are tied together.
Now that you've clarified it...
One of my pet hypotheses is that we are approaching a technological threshhold beyond which we cannot pass under our current social and government organization. The basic idea is that more advanced technologies require a more specialized division of labor. This in turn requires a increasingly efficient methods of coordination, distribution, and valuation for the more finely divided tasks. I believe we are reaching or have already passed a scaling limit where the inefficiencies of heirarchal methods outweigh the efficiencies by so much that further advancement comes at a cost that outweighs its benefits. We already see signs of this all around us.
Markets are a far more efficient and responsive mechanisms than heirarchies at coordination, distribution, and valuation, and so I believe that we will move to a polycentric market organization in social, legal, and business organization as technology progresses further.
The flip side of that is that if we are prevented from making that transition, we won't advance technologically. Technological stagnation is a real possibility. The internet, and to a slightly lesser extent the entire software industry, has operated under a largely polycentric market organization from the start. I don't think the industry would exist if it hadn't. And it may all but cease to exist if centralized control is imposed on it.
The state won't go away once enough people want the state to go away,
the state will effectively disappear once enough people no longer care
that much whether it stays or goes. We don't need a revolution, we need
millions of them.