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  1. Dictionary
    libertarian
    /ˌlɪbəˈtɛːrɪən/

    noun

    • 1. an advocate or supporter of a political philosophy that advocates only minimal state intervention in the free market and the private lives of citizens: "no true libertarian would ever support a culture where citizens must show their papers to travel"
    • 2. a person who advocates civil liberty.

    adjective

    • 1. relating to or denoting a political philosophy that advocates only minimal state intervention in the free market and the private lives of citizens: "he holds libertarian views on most social issues"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Libertarians believe that, in politics, liberty is the most important value. Almost everyone wants freedom for themselves, but a libertarian also seeks to protect and expand the freedom of others. When people are free, we can create a more just, more prosperous, safer, and better world for everyone. A libertarian is committed to the principle ...

  3. Jul 29, 2019 · In America most classical liberals took the name of “libertarians.”. Libertarianism is the belief that each person has the right to live his life as he chooses so long as he respects the equal rights of others. Libertarians defend each person’s right to life, liberty, and property. In the libertarian view, voluntary agreement is the gold ...

  4. Apr 4, 2019 · Yet it’s also not exactly libertarian. Increasingly, some young people who lean right-of-center are embracing a fusion libertarian-conservatism, colloquially known as “ conservatarianism .”. These young people, like me, are predisposed to favor conservative ideology, but fed-up with the old-style social intolerance still lingering within ...

  5. Sep 13, 2016 · Libertarians have been largely hostile to the concept of social justice since at least Friedrich Hayek’s Constitution of Liberty (CoL, 1960) and Robert Nozick’s Anarchy, State, and Utopia (ASU, 1974). I think this is a mistake, not because these libertarian luminaries were wrong, but because we now have a better conception of social justice.

  6. Eric Mack on Anarchy, State, and Utopia. “Anarchy, State, and Utopia has been a place of refuge and inspiration for non- mainstreamers and a tantalizingly, seductively dangerous territory for more open- minded mainstreamers. The prestige of Nozick and the heightened interest in libertarian ideas engendered by Anarchy, State, and Utopia opened ...

  7. Aug 15, 2008 · Freedom, in this sense, focuses on external human control over the decisions and actions of individuals, and it calls for respect for fundamental civil liberties. Accordingly, the function of the state is to maintain and enforce laws that protect this domain for individuals. In contrast, advocates of positive freedom point out that individuals ...

  8. Aug 15, 2008 · Left libertarianism is a fairly recently coined term for a fairly old idea. Those people who embrace this view agree with other libertarians in holding that individuals should be free. They regard each of us as full self- owners. However, they differ from what we generally understand by the term libertarian in denying the right to private property.

  9. www.libertarianism.org › publications › essaysA History of Libertarianism

    Jan 15, 1997 · In this excerpt from Libertarianism: A Primer, Boaz tells the history of the movement for liberty, from Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu through the 20th century. In a sense there have always and ever been only two political philosophies: liberty and power. Either people should be free to live their lives as they see fit, as long as they respect the ...

  10. Sep 28, 2017 · The modern libertarian movement overwhelmingly tends to define capitalism simply as a system of free competition and exchange, in which private owners order their own property and contractual agreements are strictly voluntary. Capitalism here is just another way of saying free market. But free- market economics was not always capitalist economics.

  11. Nov 27, 2018 · The libertarian thinker Roy Childs, in his “Open Letter to Ayn Rand” attempting to convert Rand to free market anarchism, challenged the minarchist position with similar questions. Childs said that there were two alternatives for a monopolistic government such as Ayn Rand advocated: It could allow competing defense agencies--the private, free market provision of justice--or else it could “use force or the threat of it” to perpetuate itself and its monopoly position.