Libertarianism
| This series is linked to the Politics series This article is about the classical liberal individualist philosophy that strongly emphasizes private property rights conjoined with civil liberties. ...
Politics, sometimes defined as the art and science of government. ...
| | Factions Minarchism Agorism Geolibertarianism Paleolibertarianism Neolibertarianism Left-libertarianism In civics, minarchism, sometimes called minimal statism or small government, is the view that the size, role and influence of government in a free society should be minimal - only large enough to protect the liberty of each and every individual, without violating the liberty of any individuals itself, thus maximizing...
Agorism is a radical libertarian political philosophy popularized by Samuel Edward Konkin III, who defined an agorist as a conscious practitioner of counter-economics (peaceful black markets and grey markets). ...
Geolibertarianism (also geoanarchism) is a political philosophy that holds with other forms of libertarian individualism that each individual has an exclusive right to the fruits of his or her labor, as opposed to this product being owned collectively by society or the community. ...
Paleolibertarianism is a school of thought within American libertarianism founded by Murray Rothbard and Lew Rockwell, and closely associated with the Ludwig von Mises Institute. ...
Neolibertarianism is a political philosophy combining elements of libertarian and conservative thought that embraces incrementalism and pragmatism domestically, and a generally interventionist foreign policy based on self-interest, national defense and the expansion of freedom. ...
Historically, the term libertarianism was first coined by leftist followers of Mikhail Bakunin to describe their own, anti-statist version of socialism, as contrasted with the state socialism propounded by Marx. ...
Influences Austrian School Anarchism Anarcho-capitalism Classical liberalism Objectivism The Austrian School is a school of economic thought that rejects opposing economists reliance on methods used in natural science for the study of human action, and instead bases its formalism of economics on relationships through logic or introspection called praxeology. ...
Anarchism is derived from the Greek αναÏÏία (without archons (ruler, chief, king)). Anarchism as a political philosophy, is the belief that rulers, governments, and hierarchal social relationships are unnecessary and should be abolished, although there are differing interpretations of what this means. ...
Anarcho-capitalism refers to an anti-statist philosophy that embraces capitalism as one of its foundational principles. ...
Classical liberalism (also called classic liberalism or simply liberalism) is the original form of, and is today a tendency within, liberalism. ...
Objectivism is the philosophical system developed by Russian-born American philosopher and writer Ayn Rand. ...
Ideas Civil liberties Free markets Laissez-faire Liberty Non-aggression Self-ownership This article is in need of attention. ...
A free market is an idealized market, where all economic decisions and actions by individuals regarding transfer of money, goods, and services are voluntary, and are therefore devoid of coercion and theft (some definitions of coercion are inclusive of theft). Colloquially and loosely, a free market economy is an economy...
Laissez-faire is short for laissez faire, laissez passer, a French phrase meaning to let things alone, let them pass. First used by the eighteenth century Physiocrats as an injunction against government interference with trade, it is now used as a synonym for strict free market economics. ...
Liberty - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...
The non-aggression principle (also called the non-aggression axiom, anticoercion principle, or zero aggression principle) is an ethical prohibition against aggression, which is defined as the initiation of physical force or the threat of such upon persons or their property (the principle does not preclude retaliation against aggression). ...
Self-ownership is the condition where an individual has the exclusive moral or legal right to control his or her own body and life. ...
Key issues Parties Economic views Views of rights Theories of law Libertarian Party can refer to several libertarian political parties, including: United States Libertarian Party Libertarian Party of Canada Movimiento Libertario of Costa Rica The Libertarianz of New Zealand Libertarian Party of Australia There are also political parties that hold some of the same policies as the above parties but do...
The Austrian School of economics and the Chicago School of economics are important foundations of the economic system favored by modern libertarians âcapitalism, where the means of production are privately owned, economic and financial decisions are made privately rather than by state control, and goods and services are exchanged in...
Libertarians and Objectivists limit what they define as rights to variations on the right to be left alone, and argue that other rights such as the right to a good education or the right to have free access to water are not legitimate rights and do not deserve the same...
Libertarian theories of law build on libertarianism or classical liberalism. ...
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The libertarian Reason Magazine dedicated an issue to Ayn Rand's influence one hundred years after her birth. See libertarianism and Objectivism for information on the relationship between Ayn Rand and libertarianism Reason magazine is a leading libertarian monthly magazine from the Reason Foundation. Image File history File links Ayn Rand cover for Reason Magazine. ...
Image File history File links Ayn Rand cover for Reason Magazine. ...
Ayn Rand (IPA: , February 2 [O.S. January 20] 1905 â March 6, 1982), born Alissa Zinovievna Rosenbaum, was best known for her philosophy of Objectivism and her novels We the Living, Anthem, The Fountainhead, and Atlas Shrugged. ...
Since they arose in the late 1950s and early 1960s, Libertarianism and Objectivism have had a close yet sometimes contentious relationship, with Objectivism being a significant influence upon libertarian political philosophies. ...
This article is about the classical liberal individualist philosophy that strongly emphasizes private property rights conjoined with civil liberties. ...
The Reason Foundation is a nonprofit think tank founded in 1986 that also publishes Reason magazine. ...
Reason, founded in 1968 by Lanny Friedlander as an occasional mimiographed publication and later 1970 begun as a regular monthly magazine by Robert W. Poole, Manuel S. Klausner, Tibor R. Machan and Co., is the monthly print magazine of "free minds and free markets". It covers politics, culture, and ideas through a mix of news, analysis, commentary, and reviews. 1968 (MCMLXVIII) was a leap year starting on Monday (the link is to a full 1968 calendar). ...
1970 (MCMLXX) was a common year starting on Thursday (the link is to a full 1970 calendar). ...
Nick Gillespie has been the magazine's Editor-in-Chief since 2000. Other writers include Charles Paul Freund, Jacob Sullum, Jesse Walker, Brian Doherty, Ronald Bailey, Matt Welch, Tim Cavanaugh, Julian Sanchez, Kerry Howley, Cathy Young, Jonathan Rauch, and cartoonist Peter Bagge. Nick Gillespie has been the Editor-in-Chief of Reason magazine since 2000. ...
Jacob Z. Sullum (born September 5, 1965) is a syndicated newspaper columnist and Senior Editor of Reason Magazine. ...
Jesse Walker is an associate editor for Reason Magazine. ...
Brian Doherty is a Senior Editor at Reason Magazine. ...
Ronald Bailey is the Science Editor for Reason magazine. ...
Tim Cavanaugh has been the web editor for Reason (magazine) since 2002. ...
Cathy Young (Ekaterina Jung) was born in the Soviet Union in 1963 but emigrated to the United States in 1980 at the age of 17. ...
Jonathan Rauch, a gay author, journalist and activist, is incapable of original thought but has distinguished himself from the pundit pack by his advocacy on behalf of upper middle-class gay men like himself. ...
Peter Bagge is an American comics artist and creator of Hate, Neat Stuff, Martini Baton, and Sweatshop. ...
Erik Spiekermann, the inventor of the typeface Meta, made a redesign of Reason in 2001, aiming for a look "cleaner, more modern, making use of the Meta typeface throughout". Erik Spiekermann (born May 30, 1947) is a German typographer and designer. ...
The magazine now has a circulation of around 60,000 and has twice been named one of the country's "50 best magazines" by the Chicago Tribune. In addition, since December of 2002 the magazine's website has hosted a popular blog, Hit & Run, with many Reason writers as contributors. The Chicago Tribune, formerly self-styled as the Worlds Greatest Newspaper, remains one of the principal daily newspapers of the midwestern United States. ...
For the Cusco album, see 2002 (album). ...
Hit & Run is the group blog of Reason (magazine). ...
External links - Reason
- Hit and Run
- Wired founder helps Reason
- Julian Sanchez's blog, Notes from the Lounge
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