Posts Tagged ‘property rights’


Lecture presented by Hans-Hermann Hoppe at the Ludwig von Mises Institute’s “Freedom: The One Way Out” summit, held in San Francisco, California; February 9-10, 1996. http://mises.org


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“I think it is correct to say that Western Civilization has collapsed; its creative, liberating, and humanizing foundations destroyed by the collective forces of institutionalized violence. American and European countries – long the seats of Western culture – are at the end of an entropic decline. At the same time, however, I have long suspected that we are in the early stages of a transformation in thinking that is producing major changes in how we live and work with one another in society. The vertically-structured systems of centralized authority are being replaced by horizontal networks that interconnect in decentralized, voluntary ways. The Internet – which has expanded the liberating and creative capacities inhering in Gutenberg’s invention – is the most visible expression of what I think of as the “unfolding civilization.”

“It is this social transformation that is the “terror” against which the institutional order now wars. As our world reorganizes itself into peaceful and productive systems that respect the inviolability of all persons, and relies upon spontaneous and informal processes for generating order; the political systems that now dominate mankind with their powers of death, destruction, imprisonment, torture, brutality, and other forms of violence, will lose their seductive powers. “

~Butler Shaffer


David Friedman starts speaking at 4:27.

Is there a market for good law? Without the state providing law, could it be offered by multiple, private, and competing agencies?

David Friedman, professor of law at Santa Clara University, explored this idea in his classic 1973 book, The Machinery of Freedom: Guide to a Radical Capitalism. But in the years since, he’s revised and strengthened some of his theories. In this talk, Friedman will offer these new ideas from the last 30 years of thinking about the market for law.


The Wizards of Ozymandias

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Book Description:

Western Civilization–the American version in particular–is in a very turbulent and, perhaps terminal condition. The sense of civility that helps give meaning to a “civilization” is in full retreat.

Butler Shaffer has, over the course of several years, written 51 wonderful essays observing the dissolution of Western culture and civilization. They have been assembled in the The Wizards of Ozymandias a captivating work full of entertaining epigrams and anecdotes, as well as enlightening commentary on current events, and historical episodes, that will keep you engaged and immersed from the first to last page. Shaffer’s intellectual prowess and deep well of life experience enlightens and rouses introspection at every turn. It is immediately evident that the author has been writing on law, economics, and history for decades. This book will challenge you to more deeply contemplate the ideals of liberty. The title may be foreboding, but for all that, the book is an uplifting and gratifying read.

In his great poem “Ozymandias” Percy Shelley pictures for us the eponymous tyrant whose arrogance of power could not save him from historical oblivion. Ozymandias is a reminder of the fragile nature of every system—be it biological, institutional, or cosmic in character. As we are learning from the advanced course in history in which we seem now to be enrolled, this precariousness also applies to civilizations. It is difficult for intelligent minds to doubt that this current system is in the process of joining Ozymandias in the dust-bin of history.

Western culture has produced material and spiritual values that have done so much to humanize and civilize mankind. Unfortunately, it has also produced highly-structured institutions and practices that not only impede, but reverse these life-enhancing qualities. Is it possible for us to energize our intelligence in order to rediscover, in the debris of our dying civilization, the requisite components for a fundamentally transformed culture grounded in free, peaceful, and productive systems that sustain rather than diminish life?

In the introduction Shaffer describes how civilizations are created by individuals. In following chapters, he explains how they are destroyed by collectives which are good for little more than the destruction of what others have created. Seen in the sharp contrasts between market economies and state socialism; the fundamental struggles are between the creative energies unleashed by liberty, and the repressive forces of politics. Shaffer explores the impact that institutionalism may have on the decline of civilization.

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Lecture presented by David Friedman at the Mises Institute Brasil’s 1st Austrian School of Economics seminar on April 11, 2010.

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Lecture presented by Neville Kennard to the inaugural Mises Institute Australia seminar on November 25-26, 2011 in Sydney. Includes an introduction by Benjamin Marks.

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Lecture presented by Dr. Hans-Hermann Hoppe to the inaugural Mises Institute Australia seminar on November 25-26, 2011 in Sydney. Hans-Hermann Hoppe is an Austrian school economist of the anarcho-capitalist tradition, a senior fellow of the Ludwig von Mises Institute and economics professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. He is the author of Democracy: The God That Failed; The Economics and Ethics of Private Property; A Theory of Socialism and Capitalism, and is the editor of The Myth of National Defense.

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Economics and Ethics of Private Property: Studies in Political Economy and Philosophy, The

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Presented by Jeffrey A. Tucker at “The Delusion of Good Government”: the Mises Circle in Colorado Springs, Colorado; 18 September 2010. Sponsored by Pikes Peak Economics Club. Includes an introduction by Douglas French.

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Bourbon for Breakfast

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It's a Jetsons World: Private Miracles and Public Crimes

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Presented by Jeff Tucker at “The Miracles of Capitalism,” a high school seminar hosted at the Mises Institute and sponsored by Dr. Don W. Printz on 29 April 2011.

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