The market environment itself demanded the emergence of rules that would grant market participants greater freedom to be creative. These rules—law—function, to some degree, as an “autopilot,” allowing people to avoid spending time searching for and testing solutions, thereby, as we have already noted, expanding human freedom. What distinguishes these rules from the traditions of the tribal era is their universality: they do not prescribe each procedure individually, but only the conditions necessary for its implementation. Law is inseparable from the market and is closely bound up with it. As a generalization of practice, law emerged through the natural selection of norms and rules, continuously improving and becoming ever more universal.