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{{short description|1=Overview of and topical guide to libertarianism}}
{{short description|1=Overview of and topical guide to libertarianism}}
{{globalize|section|USA|date=February 2019}}
{{libertarianism sidebar}}
{{libertarianism sidebar}}
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a special type of list article.
The following [[Outline (list)|outline]] is provided as an overview of and topical guide to [[libertarianism]], a [[political philosophy]] that upholds [[liberty]] as its principal objective. As a result, libertarians seek to maximize [[autonomy]] and [[freedom of choice]], emphasizing [[political freedom]], [[voluntary association]] and the primacy of [[Individualism|individual judgment]].
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The following [[Outline (list)|outline]] is provided as an overview of and topical guide to libertarianism:

'''[[Libertarianism]]''' &ndash; political philosophy that upholds liberty as its principal objective. As a result, libertarians seek to maximize autonomy and freedom of choice, emphasizing political freedom, voluntary association and the primacy of individual judgment.
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* [[Self-governance]] – the idea that a person or group are able to exercise all of the necessary functions of power without intervention from any authority which they cannot themselves alter
* [[Self-governance]] – the idea that a person or group are able to exercise all of the necessary functions of power without intervention from any authority which they cannot themselves alter
* [[Self-ownership]] – the concept of property in one's own person, expressed as the moral or natural right of a person to be the exclusive controller of his or her own body and life
* [[Self-ownership]] – the concept of property in one's own person, expressed as the moral or natural right of a person to be the exclusive controller of his or her own body and life
* [[Social responsibility]] – the idea that a person is responsible for and has an obligation to act in the best interests of their community
* [[Voluntary association]] – a group of individuals who enter into an agreement as teers to form a body (or organization) to accomplish a purpose
* [[Voluntary association]] – a group of individuals who enter into an agreement as teers to form a body (or organization) to accomplish a purpose


; Rejects:
; Rejects:
* [[Authoritarianism]] – a form of social organization characterized by submission to authority
* [[Authoritarianism]] – a form of social organization characterized by submission to authority
* [[Coercion]] – the practice of forcing another party to behave in an intary manner (whether through action or inaction) by use of threats or intimidation or some other form of pressure or force
* [[Coercion]] – the practice of forcing another party to behave in an involuntary manner (whether through action or inaction) by use of threats or intimidation or some other form of pressure or force
* [[Discrimination]] – a form of collectivism that involves treating people based on the group, class, or category to which that person or thing belongs rather than on individual merit
* [[Imperialism]] – as defined by the ''Dictionary of Human Geography'', it is "the creation and/or maintenance of an unequal economic, cultural and territorial relationship, usually between states and often in the form of an empire, based on domination and subordination"
* [[Imperialism]] – as defined by the ''Dictionary of Human Geography'', it is "the creation and/or maintenance of an unequal economic, cultural and territorial relationship, usually between states and often in the form of an empire, based on domination and subordination"


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* [[Anarcho-capitalism and minarchism]] and [[libertarian municipalism]]
* [[Anarcho-capitalism and minarchism]] and [[libertarian municipalism]]
* [[Libertarian perspectives on capital punishment|Capital punishment]]
* [[Libertarian perspectives on capital punishment|Capital punishment]]
*[[Consequentialist libertarianism|Consequentialism]] vs. [[Natural-rights libertarianism|deontology]]
* [[Consequentialist libertarianism|Consequentialism]] vs. [[Natural-rights libertarianism|deontology]]
* [[Employment|Employee–employer relationship]] vs. [[workers' self-management]] and [[worker cooperative]]s
* [[Employment|Employee–employer relationship]] vs. [[workers' self-management]] and [[worker cooperative]]s
* [[Libertarianism and conservation laws|Environmentalism]]
* [[Libertarian perspectives on foreign intervention|Foreign intervention]]
* [[Libertarian perspectives on foreign intervention|Foreign intervention]]
* [[Free-market environmentalism]]
* [[Market economy#Capitalism|Free-market]] and ''[[Raw capitalism|laissez-faire]]'' [[capitalism]] vs. [[Libertarian communism|communism]] and [[Libertarian socialism|socialism]] (including both [[Free-market socialism|free-market]] and ''[[Laissez-faire#Laissez-faire socialism|laissez-faire]]'' [[socialism]] and [[Market abolitionism|market abolitionist]], [[Decentralized planning (economics)|decentralized-planned economy]])
* [[Market economy#Capitalism|Free-market]] and ''[[Raw capitalism|laissez-faire]]'' [[capitalism]] vs. [[Libertarian communism|communism]] and [[Libertarian socialism|socialism]] (including both [[Free-market socialism|free-market]] and ''[[Laissez-faire#Laissez-faire socialism|laissez-faire]]'' [[socialism]] and [[Market abolitionism|market abolitionist]], [[Decentralized planning (economics)|decentralized-planned economy]])
* [[Libertarian perspectives on immigration|Immigration]]
* [[Libertarian perspectives on immigration|Immigration]]
* [[Libertarian perspectives on inheritance|Inheritance]]
* [[Libertarian perspectives on intellectual property|Intellectual property]]
* [[Libertarian perspectives on intellectual property|Intellectual property]]
* [[Libertarian theories of law|Law]]
* [[Libertarian theories of law|Law]]
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== Branches and schools of libertarianism ==
== Branches and schools of libertarianism ==
Libertarianism has many overlapping schools of thought, all focused on smaller government and greater individual responsibility. As interpretations of the [[non-aggression principle]] vary, some libertarian schools of thought promote the total abolition of government while others promote a smaller government which does not initiate force. Some seek private ownership of all property and natural resources while others promote communal ownership of all natural resources and varying degrees of private property.
Libertarianism has many overlapping schools of thought, all focused on [[Small government|smaller government]] and greater individual responsibility. As interpretations of the [[non-aggression principle]] vary, some libertarian schools of thought promote the total abolition of government while others promote a smaller government which does not initiate force. Some seek private ownership of all property and natural resources while others promote communal ownership of all natural resources and varying degrees of private property.
* [[Agorism]]
* [[Agorism]]
* [[Anarcho-capitalism]]
* [[Anarcho-capitalism]]
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* ''[[Laissez-faire]]''
* ''[[Laissez-faire]]''
* [[Left-wing market anarchism]]
* [[Left-wing market anarchism]]
* [[Liberalism]]
* [[Liberism]]
* [[Liberism]]
* [[Libertarian Christianity]]
* [[Libertarian Christianity]]
* [[Libertarian conservatism]]
* [[Libertarian conservatism]]
* [[Libertarian paternalism]]
* [[Libertarian paternalism]]
*[[Libertarian transhumanism]]
* [[Libertarian transhumanism]]
* [[Market liberalism]]
* [[Market liberalism]]
* [[Market socialism]]
* [[Market socialism]]
* [[Minarchism]]
* [[Minarchism]]
* [[Paleolibertarianism]]
* [[Paleolibertarianism]]
* [[Panarchism]]
* [[Panarchy (political philosophy)|Panarchism]]
* [[Philosophical anarchism]]
* [[Philosophical anarchism]]
* [[Propertarianism]]
* [[Propertarianism]]
* [[Right-libertarianism]]
* [[Right-libertarianism]]
* [[Social libertarianism]]
* [[Voluntaryism]]
* [[Voluntaryism]]


== Origins of libertarianism ==
== Origins of libertarianism ==
* [[Age of Enlightenment]]
* [[Anarchism]]
* [[History of liberalism#Classical liberalism|Classical liberalism]]
** [[History of anarchism]]
** [[Anarcho-communism]]
* [[Individualist anarchism]]
* [[Jeffersonian democracy]]
** [[Individualist anarchism]]
** [[Social anarchism]]
* [[Anti-Federalism]]
** [[Jeffersonian democracy]]
* [[Aristotelianism]]
** [[Thomism]]
* [[Free market economics]]
** [[Austrian School of Economics]]
** [[Chicago School of Economics]]
** [[Classical economics]]
** [[French Liberal School]]
* [[Levellers]]
* [[Liberalism]]
** [[History of liberalism]]
** [[Age of Enlightenment]]
** [[Classical liberalism]]
* [[Libertarian communism]]
* [[Libertarian socialism]]
* [[Metaphysical libertarianism]]
* [[Natural law]]
* [[Natural law]]
* [[Radicalism (historical)|Radicalism]]
** [[Classical radicalism]]
* [[Transcendentalism]]


== Libertarian theory and politics ==
== Libertarian theory and politics ==
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{{expand list|section|date=March 2011}}
{{expand list|section|date=March 2011}}
* [[Autonomy]]
* [[Autonomy]]
*[[Civil liberties]]
* [[Civil liberties]]
*[[Civil society]]
* [[Civil society]]
* [[Co-operative economics]]
* [[Co-operative economics]]
* [[Counter-economics]]
* [[Counter-economics]]
* [[Decentralization]]
* [[Decentralization]]
* [[Economic freedom]]
* [[Economic freedom]]
*[[Economic secession]]
* [[Free market]]
* [[Free market]]
*[[Free speech]]
* [[Free speech]]
* [[Free trade]]
* [[Free trade]]
* [[Free will]]
* [[Free will]]
* [[Freedom of association#Libertarian|Freedom of association]]
* [[Freedom of association#Libertarian|Freedom of association]]
* [[Freedom of contract]]
* [[Freedom of contract]]
* [[Freedom of movement]]
* [[Freedom of religion]]
* [[Freedom of the press]]
* [[Homestead principle]]
* [[Homestead principle]]
* [[Individualism]]
* [[Individualism]]
* ''[[Laissez-faire]]''
* ''[[Laissez-faire]]''
* [[Law of equal liberty]]
* [[Law of equal liberty]]
*[[Libertarian perspectives on LGBT rights|LGBT rights]]
* [[Libertarian perspectives on LGBT rights|LGBT rights]]
*[[Libertarian utopia]]
* [[Liberty]]
* [[Liberty]]
* [[Limited government]]
* [[Limited government]]
* [[Methodological individualism]]
* [[Methodological individualism]]
*[[Mutual liberty]]
* [[Mutual liberty]]
* [[Natural rights]]
* [[Natural rights]]
* [[Night watchman state]]
* [[Night watchman state]]
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* [[Non-interventionism]]
* [[Non-interventionism]]
* [[Non-politics]]
* [[Non-politics]]
*[[Nonviolence|Non-violence]]
* [[Nonviolence|Non-violence]]
* [[Non-voting]]
* [[Non-voting]]
* [[Participatory economics]]
* [[Participatory economics]]
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* [[Polycentric law]]
* [[Polycentric law]]
* [[Property]]
* [[Property]]
*[[Right to keep and bear arms]]
* [[Right to keep and bear arms]]
* [[Self-governance]]
* [[Self-governance]]
* [[Self-ownership]]
* [[Self-ownership]]
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* [[Voluntary society]]
* [[Voluntary society]]


== Philosophers and economists who have influenced libertarianism ==
== Individuals who have influenced libertarianism ==
=== Anarchists ===
=== Anarchists ===
* [[Émile Armand]] – one of the most influential [[individualist anarchists]] of the early 20th century
* [[Émile Armand]] (1872–1962) – influential [[individualist anarchist]]
* [[Mikhail Bakunin]] – one of the main theorists of [[collectivist anarchism]] and a major influence on the development of [[left-libertarianism]]
* [[Mikhail Bakunin]] (1814–1876)theorist of [[collectivist anarchism]] who influenced the development of [[left-libertarianism]]
* [[William Godwin]] – the first modern proponent of [[anarchism]], whose political views are outlined in his book ''[[Political Justice]]''
* [[William Godwin]] (1756–1836) – the first modern proponent of [[anarchism]], whose political views are outlined in his book ''[[Political Justice]]''
* [[Karl Hess]] (1923–1993) – libertarian socialist and tax resistor
* [[Pierre-Joseph Proudhon]] – the first self-described anarchist and founder of [[mutualism (economic theory)|mutualism]]
* [[Thomas Hodgskin]] (1787–1869) – author of works on anti-capitalism, individualist anarchism and libertarian socialism
* [[Lysander Spooner]] – notable individualist anarchist and founder of the [[American Letter Mail Company]]
* [[Max Stirner]] – founder of [[egoist anarchism]]
* [[Pierre-Joseph Proudhon]] (1809–1865) the first self-described anarchist and founder of [[mutualism (economic theory)|mutualism]]
* [[Lysander Spooner]] (1808–1887) – notable individualist anarchist and founder of the [[American Letter Mail Company]]
* [[Benjamin Tucker]] – a leading theorist of individualist anarchism in the 19th century
* [[Max Stirner]] (1806–1856) – founder of [[egoist anarchism]]
* [[Josiah Warren]] – the first known [[Anarchism in the United States|American anarchist]] and author of the first anarchist periodical ''The Peaceful Revolutionist''
* [[Benjamin Tucker]] (1854–1939) – a leading theorist of individualist anarchism in the 19th century
* [[Josiah Warren]] (1798–1874) – the first known [[Anarchism in the United States|American anarchist]] and author of the anarchist periodical ''The Peaceful Revolutionist''


=== Economists ===
=== Economists ===
* [[Frédéric Bastiat]] – 19th century creator of the concept of [[opportunity cost]]
* [[Frédéric Bastiat]] (1801–1850) – 19th century creator of the concept of [[opportunity cost]]
* [[Peter Thomas Bauer|Peter Bauer]] (1915–2002) – wrote about [[developmental economics]]
* [[Milton Friedman]] – [[Nobel Prize]]-winning [[Monetarism|monetarist]] economist, notable for his advocacy of economic deregulation and privatization
* [[Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk]] (1851–1914) – contributor to the [[Austrian School]]
* [[Robin Hahnel]] – modern [[participatory economics]] scholar and [[Libertarian socialism|libertarian socialist]]
* [[Richard Cantillon]] ({{circa|1680}}–1734) – wrote about prices, value, and markets
* [[Friedrich Hayek]] – Nobel Prize-winning [[Austrian School]] economist, notable for his political work ''[[The Road to Serfdom]]''
* [[Charles Dunoyer]] (1786–1862) – French economist and political scholar
* [[Elinor Ostrom]] – Nobel Prize-winning [[common pool resource]] theorist and environmentalist
* [[Ludwig von Mises]] philosopher, Austrian School economist, sociologist and classical liberal
* [[David D. Friedman]] (b. 1945) American economist
* [[Robin Hahnel]] (b. 1946) – modern [[participatory economics]] scholar and [[Libertarian socialism|libertarian socialist]]
* [[Murray Rothbard]] – founder of [[anarcho-capitalism]] and a leading Austrian School economist
* [[Floyd Harper]] (1905–1973) – founded the [[Institute for Humane Studies]]
* [[E. F. Schumacher]] – internationally influential British economist and statistician and author of ''[[Small Is Beautiful]]: A Study of Economics as if People Mattered''
* [[Hans-Hermann Hoppe]] (b. 1949) – developed extensive work on [[argumentation ethics]]
* [[Nassim Nicholas Taleb]] – statistician, philosopher and author of ''[[The Black Swan (Taleb book)|The Black Swan]]''
* [[Israel M. Kirzner]] (b. 1930) – British economist
* [[Hans-Hermann Hoppe]] – developed extensive work on [[argumentation ethics]]
* [[Frank H. Knight]] (1855–1972) – American professor
* [[Carl Menger]] (1840–1921) – founder of [[Austrian School]] economics
* [[John Stuart Mill]] (1806–1873) – British philosopher and political economist, wrote ''[[On Liberty]]''
* [[Ludwig von Mises]] (1881–1972) – philosopher, Austrian School economist, sociologist and classical liberal
* [[Gustave de Molinari]] (1819–1912) – French commentator on political economy
* [[Franz Oppenheimer]] (1864–1943) – German sociologist and economist
* [[Vincent Ostrom]] (1919–2012) – American educator and political economist
* [[David Ricardo]] (1772–1823) – British classical economist
* [[Murray Rothbard]] (1926–1995) – founder of [[anarcho-capitalism]] and a leading Austrian School economist
* [[Jean-Baptiste Say]] (1767–1832) – French political economist
* [[Joseph Schumpeter]] (1883–1950) – [[Moravia]]n-born Austrian economist
* [[Nassau William Senior]] (1790–1864) – British economist
* [[Julian Simon]] (1932–1998) – American economist
* [[Adam Smith]] (1723–1790) – British political economist and philosopher
* [[Thomas Sowell]] (b. 1930) – American economist and social theorist
* [[William Graham Sumner]] (1840–1910) – American economist and sociologist
* [[Antoine Destutt de Tracy]] (1754–1836) – French economist and political theorist
* [[Gordon Tullock]] (1922–2014) – American economist and sociologist
* [[Anne Robert Jacques Turgot]] (1727–1781) – French economist and statesman
* [[Knut Wicksell]] (1851–1926) – Swedish economist

* '''[[Nobel Laureates]]'''
** [[Gary Becker]] (1930–2014) – who wrote about human behavior
** [[James M. Buchanan]] (1919–2013) – worked on [[public choice theory]]
** [[Ronald H. Coase]] (1910–2013) – studied [[transaction costs]]
** [[Milton Friedman]] (1912–2006) – [[Monetarism|monetarist]] economist, supported economic deregulation and privatization
** [[Friedrich Hayek]] (1899–1992) – [[Austrian School]] economist, notable for his political work ''[[The Road to Serfdom]]''
** [[Elinor Ostrom]] (1933–2012) – [[common pool resource]] theorist and environmentalist
** [[George J. Stigler]] (1911–1991) – Chicago School economist

===Legal and political figures===
* [[John Adams]] (1735–1826) – drafted the American [[United States Declaration of Independence|Declaration of Independence]]
* [[Étienne de La Boétie]] (1530–1563) – French judge and writer, early advocate of [[civil disobedience]] and [[nonviolent resistance]]
* [[Edmund Burke]] (1792–1797) – influential [[liberal conservative]]
* [[Ed Clark]] (b. 1930) – lawyer and US Libertarian Party politician
* [[Richard Cobden]] (1804–1865) – [[Anti-Corn Law League]] figure (opposing [[tariffs]])
* [[Edward Coke]] (1552–1634) – British MP and legal scholar
* [[Charles Comte]] (1782–1837) – French political and legal scholar
* [[Marquis de Condorcet]] (1743–1794) – author and liberal reformer during the French Revolution
* [[Benjamin Constant]] (1767–1830) – figure during the French Revolution who argued for constitutional limits on power
* [[Albert Venn Dicey]] (1835–1922) – scholar of British constitutional law
* [[Denis Diderot]] (1713–1784) – French legal scholar
* [[Richard A. Epstein]] (b. 1943) – American law professor and legal theorist
* [[Adam Ferguson]] (1723–1816) – influenced the [[Scottish Enlightenment]]
* [[William Ewart Gladstone]] (1809–1898) – British political figure
* [[Barry Goldwater]] (1909–1998) – US Senator and presidential candidate
* [[Auberon Herbert]] (1836–1906) – British writer, MP, and founder of the doctrine of [[Voluntaryism]]
* [[John Hospers]] (1918–2011) – American philosopher and Libertarian Party political candidate
* [[Thomas Jefferson]] (1743–1826) – American president
* [[Roger Lea MacBride]] (1929–1995) – American writer and US Libertarian Party presidential nominee
* [[James Madison]] (1750–1836) – American president
* [[Henry Sumner Maine]] (1822–1888) – British legal scholar
* [[George Mason]] (1725–1792) – American Revolutionary War figure
* [[Tonie Nathan]] (1923–2014) – American media commentator and Libertarian Party vice-presidential election candidate
* [[Thomas Paine]] (1737–1809) – American Revolutionary War figure
* [[Ron Paul]] (b. 1935) – American politician and presidential candidate (1988, 2008 and 2012)
* [[Richard Posner]] (b. 1939) – American judge and legal theorist
* [[Roscoe Pound]] (1870–1964) – American legal theorist
* [[John Rawls]] (1921–2002) – American legal theorist
* [[Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury|Third Earl of Shaftesbury]] (1671–1713) – English politician, philosopher, and writer
* [[Algernon Sidney]] (1623–1683) – British statesman and philosopher
* [[Robert A. Taft]] (1889–1953) – US Senator and conservative politician
* [[George Washington]] (1732–1799) – American president
* [[William Wilberforce]] (1759–1833) – British politician, social activist, and philanthropist


=== Objectivists ===
=== Objectivists ===
* [[Nathaniel Branden]] (1930–2014) – influenced Ayn Rand
* [[Ayn Rand]] – the creator of the philosophy of [[Objectivism (Ayn Rand)|Objectivism]]
* [[Leonard Peikoff]] – founder of the [[Ayn Rand Institute]] and Rand's designated intellectual heir
* [[Leonard Peikoff]] (b. 1933) – founder of the [[Ayn Rand Institute]] and Rand's designated intellectual heir
* [[Ayn Rand]] (1905–1982) – the creator of the philosophy of [[Objectivism]]


=== Others ===
=== Others ===
* [[Thomas Aquinas]] ({{circa|1225}}–1274) – theologian who wrote about [[individual autonomy]]
* [[Aristotle]] – Greek philosopher and polymath who's philosophy stressed [[Virtue|personal virtue]]
* [[Aristotle]] ({{BCE|382–322}}) – Greek philosopher and polymath whose philosophy stressed [[Virtue|personal virtue]]
*[[Étienne de La Boétie]] – french judge and writer, early advocate of [[civil disobedience]] and [[nonviolent resistance]] as means to stop tyranny
* [[Jeremy Bentham]] (1748–1832) – English 'father of utilitarianism'
*[[Murray Bookchin]] – the founder of [[libertarian municipalism]] and a leading theorist of the [[Social ecology (theory)|social ecology]] movement
* [[Murray Bookchin]] (1921–2006) – founder of [[libertarian municipalism]] and [[Social ecology (theory)|social ecology]] theorist
* [[Noam Chomsky]] – pioneering linguist and social critic
* [[John Bright]] (1811–1889) – British radical who promoted [[free trade]]
* [[Karl Hess]] – libertarian socialist and tax resistor
* [[John Brown (abolitionist)|John Brown]] (1800–1859) – abolitionist leader
* [[Robert Nozick]] – philosopher and author of ''[[Anarchy, State, and Utopia]]''
* [[Henry Thomas Buckle]] (1821–1862) – historian who defended ''[[laissez-faire]]'' trade
*[[Auberon Herbert]] – founder of the doctrine of [[Voluntaryism]]
* [[Jean-Jacques Burlamaqui]] (1694–1748) – wrote about [[natural law]]

* [[Roy Childs]] (1949–1992) – essayist and critic
* [[David Hume]] – [[Scottish Enlightenment]] writer whose ''[[Treatise of Human Nature]]'' (Book 3) argued that rules of justice originated from many human actions, not rational calculation
* [[Frank Chodorov]] (1887–1966) – member of the American [[Old Right (United States)|Old Right]]
*[[John Locke]] – philosopher, generally regarded as the 'father of liberalism'
* [[Noam Chomsky]] (b. 1928) – linguist and social critic
* [[Ron Paul]] – politician and presidential candidate (1988, 2008 and 2012)
* [[Cicero]] ({{BCE|106–43}}) – Roman jurist and [[Humanism|classical humanist]]
*[[Herbert Spencer]] – biologist, sociologist and philosopher
* [[Frederick Douglass]] (1818–1895) – American abolitionist
* [[Henry David Thoreau]] – one of the leading phil–osophers of American [[transcendentalism]] and [[anarcho-pacifism]]
* [[Robert Anton Wilson]] – radical author of ''[[The Illuminatus! Trilogy]]''
* [[Ralph Waldo Emerson]] (1803–1882)American founder of [[Transcendentalism]]
* [[Antony Fisher]] (1915–1988) – British philanthropist and founder of the [[Atlas Network]]
* [[Michel Foucault]] (1926–1984) – French social theorist
* [[William Lloyd Garrison]] (1805–1879) – American abolitionist
* [[Henry Hazlitt]] (1894–1993) – American journalist and writer
* [[Robert Heinlein]] (1907–1988) – science fiction writer
* [[Thomas Hobbes]] (1588–1676) – political theorist who wrote ''[[Leviathan (Hobbes book)|Leviathan]]''
* [[Wilhelm von Humboldt]] (1767–1835) – German political theorist who wrote ''[[The Limits of State Action]]''
* [[David Hume]] (1711–1776) – [[Scottish Enlightenment]] author of the ''[[Treatise of Human Nature]]''
* [[Francis Hutcheson (philosopher)|Francis Hutcheson]] (1694–1746) – figure in the [[Scottish Enlightenment]]
* [[Jane Jacobs]] (1916–2006) – Canadian writer on urban planning
* [[Bertrand de Jouvenel]] (1903–1987) – French writer on political and social thought
* [[Immanuel Kant]] (1724–1804) – German [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] philosopher
* [[Rose Wilder Lane]] (1886–1968) – American writer
* [[Lao Tzu]] ({{circa}} {{BCE|600}}) – argued for limited government
* [[Bartolomé de las Casas]] (1474–1566) – Spanish historian
* [[Robert LeFevre]] (1911–1986) – American educator, founder of [[Rampart College]]
* [[William Leggett (writer)|William Leggett]] (1801–1839) – American journalist
* [[John Locke]] (1632–1704) – philosopher, generally regarded as the 'father of liberalism'
* [[Lord Acton]] (1834–1902) – historian
* [[Thomas Babington Macaulay]] (1800–1859) – British classical liberal
* [[Bernard Mandeville]] (1670–1733) – Dutch-born, London based physician
* [[H. L. Mencken]] (1880–1956) – American writer
* [[Frank Meyer (political philosopher)|Frank S. Meyer]] (1909–1972) – American writer and founder of ''[[National Review]]''
* [[John Milton]] (1608–1674) – British poet and political commentator
* [[Michel de Montaigne]] (1533–1592) – writer during the French Renaissance
* [[Montesquieu]] (1689–1755) – French social commentator and political thinker
* [[Charles Murray (political scientist)|Charles Murray]] (b. 1943) – American political scientist
* [[Friedrich Nietzsche]] (1844–1900) – German political writer
* [[Albert Jay Nock]] (1870–1945) – American political writer
* [[Robert Nozick]] (1938–2002) – philosopher and author of ''[[Anarchy, State, and Utopia]]''
* [[José Ortega y Gasset]] (1883–1955) – Spanish philosopher and essayist
* [[George Orwell]] (1903–1950) – British writer and social analyst
* [[Isabel Paterson]] (1886–1961) – American writer
* [[Karl Popper]] (1902–1994) – Vienna-born British social theorist
* [[Richard Price]] (1723–1791) – British moral and political theorist
* [[Leonard E. Read]] (1898–1983) – American writer and author of ''[[I, Pencil]]''
* [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]] (1712–1778) – French Enlightenment philosopher
* [[Herbert Spencer]] (1820–1903) – biologist, sociologist and philosopher
* [[Thomas Szasz]] (1920–2012) – Hungarian-born American physician and writer
* [[Henry David Thoreau]] (1817–1862) – philosopher of American [[transcendentalism]] and [[anarcho-pacifism]]
* [[Alexis de Tocqueville]] (1805–1859) – French-born political theorist
* [[Voltaire]] (1694–1778) – French philosopher, historian, and writer
* [[Robert Anton Wilson]] (1932–2007) – author of ''[[The Illuminatus! Trilogy]]''
* [[Mary Wollstonecraft]] (1759–1797) – British writer


== See also ==
== See also ==
{{Portal|Libertarianism|Contents/Outlines}}
{{Portal|Anarchism|Liberalism|Libertarianism|Politics|Lists|Contents/Outlines}}
* [[Anarcho-syndicalism]]
* [[Anarcho-syndicalism]]
* [[Anti-state]]
* [[Anti-state]]
* [[Anti-war]]
* [[Anti-war]]
* [[Civil libertarianism]]
* [[Fusionism]]
* [[Free-market environmentalism|Free market environmentalism]]
* [[Fusionism (politics)|Fusionism]]
* [[Liberalism]]
* [[Libertarian Democrat]]
* [[Libertarian Democrat]]
* [[Libertarian Republican]]
* [[Libertarian Republican]]
* [[List of libertarian organizations]]
* [[List of libertarian organizations]]
* [[Small government]]


; Categories
; Categories
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== External links ==
== External links ==
{{sisterlinks|Libertarianism}}
{{sisterlinks|Libertarianism}}
* [https://www.britannica.com/topic/libertarianism-politics "Libertarianism"]. ''[[Encyclopædia Britannica]]''.
* [https://www.britannica.com/topic/libertarianism-politics "Libertarianism"]. ''[[Encyclopædia Britannica]]''.
* {{cite IEP|url-id=libertar|title=Libertarianism}}
* {{cite IEP|url-id=libertar|title=Libertarianism}}
* {{SEP|libertarianism|Libertarianism|Bas van der Vossen|January 28, 2019}}
* {{SEP|libertarianism|Libertarianism|Bas van der Vossen|January 28, 2019}}

;Websites
* [http://www.fee.org Foundation for Economic Education] – one of the oldest libertarian organizations in the United States
* [http://www.humblelibertarian.com/ The Humble Libertarian] – a libertarian resource and index of libertarian websites
* [http://libertarianism.com/ Libertarianism] – a non-profit site for libertarianism


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[[Category:Outlines of philosophy topics|Libertarianism]]
[[Category:Outlines of philosophy topics|Libertarianism]]
[[Category:Wikipedia outlines|Libertarianism]]
[[Category:Outlines|Libertarianism]]
[[Category:Libertarianism| ]]
[[Category:Libertarianism| ]]

Latest revision as of 13:08, 4 June 2024

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to libertarianism:

Libertarianism – political philosophy that upholds liberty as its principal objective. As a result, libertarians seek to maximize autonomy and freedom of choice, emphasizing political freedom, voluntary association and the primacy of individual judgment.

Nature of libertarianism

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Supports
  • Economic freedom – the freedom to receive the full value of one's labour, or to produce, trade and consume any goods and services acquired without the use of force, fraud or theft
  • Egalitarianism – the idea that all humans are equal in fundamental worth or social status
  • Individual responsibility – the idea that a person is responsible for their own actions and their own lives
  • Personal development – methods, skills and strategies by which individuals can effectively direct their own activities toward the achievement of objectives and includes goal setting, decision making, focusing, planning, scheduling, task tracking, self-evaluation, self-intervention, self-development and so on
  • Self-governance – the idea that a person or group are able to exercise all of the necessary functions of power without intervention from any authority which they cannot themselves alter
  • Self-ownership – the concept of property in one's own person, expressed as the moral or natural right of a person to be the exclusive controller of his or her own body and life
  • Social responsibility – the idea that a person is responsible for and has an obligation to act in the best interests of their community
  • Voluntary association – a group of individuals who enter into an agreement as teers to form a body (or organization) to accomplish a purpose
Rejects
  • Authoritarianism – a form of social organization characterized by submission to authority
  • Coercion – the practice of forcing another party to behave in an involuntary manner (whether through action or inaction) by use of threats or intimidation or some other form of pressure or force
  • Imperialism – as defined by the Dictionary of Human Geography, it is "the creation and/or maintenance of an unequal economic, cultural and territorial relationship, usually between states and often in the form of an empire, based on domination and subordination"
Debates

Branches and schools of libertarianism

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Libertarianism has many overlapping schools of thought, all focused on smaller government and greater individual responsibility. As interpretations of the non-aggression principle vary, some libertarian schools of thought promote the total abolition of government while others promote a smaller government which does not initiate force. Some seek private ownership of all property and natural resources while others promote communal ownership of all natural resources and varying degrees of private property.

Origins of libertarianism

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Libertarian theory and politics

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Libertarian ideals

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These are concepts which although not necessarily exclusive to libertarianism are significant in historical and modern libertarian circles.

Individuals who have influenced libertarianism

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Anarchists

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Economists

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Objectivists

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Others

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See also

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Categories
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  • "Libertarianism". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  • "Libertarianism". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • "Libertarianism" entry by Bas van der Vossen in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, January 28, 2019