All Posts Tagged With: "Robert Nozick"

Of Malice and Straw Men

We libertarians must be onto something. Why else would critics work so hard to construct straw men to demolish rather than contending with our actual arguments? Right from the top you could tell that Stephen Metcalf’s blast in Slate would be no different. “Liberty Scam” featured this teaser: “Why even Robert Nozick, the philosophical father [...]

21Sep2011 | Sheldon Richman | 5 comments | Continued

Book Reviews – November 2007

  • Lenin, Stalin, and Hitler: The Age of Social Catastrophe

    by Robert Gellately Reviewed by Richard M. Ebeling
  • Depression, War, and Cold War
    by Robert Higgs Reviewed by Burton Folsom, Jr.
  • Great Philanthropic Mistakes
    by Timothy Sandefur Reviewed by George C. Leef
  • Elements of Justice
    by David Schmidtz Reviewed by Aeon J. Skoble
1Nov2007 | George C. Leef | 0 comments | Continued

Book Reviews – June 2003

Dependent on D.C.: The Rise of Federal Control Over the Lives of Ordinary Americans by Charlotte Twight St. Martin’s Press/Palgrave • 2002 • 512 pages • $26.95 hardcover; $17.95 paperback Reviewed by James Bovard Charlotte Twight has written an excellent book to help Americans understand how the federal government is insidiously seizing control of their lives, year by year, edict [...]

1Jun2003 | FEE Admin | 0 comments | Continued

Robert Nozick, Philosopher of Liberty

Twenty-eight years ago a Harvard philosophy professor named Robert Nozick did something unthinkable in polite intellectual society: he published a book defending libertarianism. In 1974 libertarian ideas had virtually no presence within the academic establishment. Free-market economists F. A. Hayek and Milton Friedman had not yet won their Nobel prizes (Hayek’s would come later that [...]

1Sep2002 | Roderick T. Long | 25 comments | Continued

Tacit Consent: A Quiet Tyranny

Mr. Greenwood is a journalist in Billings, Montana. To the student of liberty, John Locke has always been an important philosopher. His doctrine of rights, especially property rights, has always struck the imagination. On the other hand, John Rawls is thought of by many who value freedom as a dangerous philosopher. His concern with fairness [...]

1Jan1995 | Bowen H. Greenwood | 1 comment | Continued
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