MainSocietyPhilosophyReference › Libertarianism

Libertarianism

Edit Page
Report
Scan day: 07 February 2014 UTC
-264
Virus safety - good
Description: Theory about the permissibility of non-consensual force violating property rights in external things and oneself; by Peter Vallentyne.
Libertarianism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy) First published Thu Sep 5, 2002; substantive revision Tue Jul 20, 2010 Libertarianism, in the strict sense, is the moral view that agents initially fully own themselves and have certain moral powers to acquire property rights in external things. In a looser sense, libertarianism is any view that approximates the strict view. This entry will focus on libertarianism in the strict sense. For excellent discussion of the liberty tradition more generally (including classical liberalism), see Gaus and Mack (2004) and Barnett (2004).
Size: 584 chars

Contact Information

Phone&Fax:
Address:
Extended:

WEBSITE Info

Page title:Libertarianism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Keywords:
Description:
IP-address:171.67.193.20

WHOIS Info

NS
Name Servers: ARGUS.STANFORD.EDU 171.64.7.115, 2607:f6d0:0:9113::ab40:773 AVALLONE.STANFORD.EDU 171.64.7.88, 2607:f6d0:0:9116::ab40:758
WHOIS
Date
activated: 04-Oct-1985
last updated: 07-May-2009
expires: 31-Jul-2014