16 responses to “Thickness Unto Death”

  1. Luke

    Firefox 2.0.0.15 Windows XP

    Stefan Molyneux harshly criticized Walter Block for proclaiming allegiance with religious institutions in a kind of ‘enemy of my enemy is my friend’ article on Lew Rockwell recently. I think this religion befriending does libertarianism a grave injustice for all the reasons you mention in this post.

  2. Stephan Kinsella

    Flock 1.2.3 MacIntosh

    This seems like a weak defense of the “thick” idea. I agree that the argument you are demolishing is weak, but so what? This is a straw man.

    Notice how you refer to “Liberty-plus-X”? The first part is what we are talking about. We libertarians just want a word to describe the “Liberty” part. One would think “libertarian” would do it, but if you are determined to redefine it to include “Liberty-plus-X” can you at least give us a new word to use for the Liberty part? I dunno, “libertyists”? Then, we former libertarians can just start calling ourselves libertyists, until the one day, I suppose, when some fellow libertyist starts saying no no, that’s too thin, libertyism includes X too…

  3. Geoffrey Allan Plauche

    MSIE 7.0 Windows XP

    Stephan,

    Sounds like a thick libertarian response to me.

    “All that one can consistently do in defense of thin libertarianism is argue that libertarians need not bundle liberty with other values; to argue, more strongly, that they should not is to turn thicklib by bundling libertarianism with a commitment to no-bundles-but-this-one.”

    Your attempt to shift the debate to just a labeling issue doesn’t let you escape the point above. You’re still stuck making ‘should’ arguments: we should let you thin libertarians have the label libertarian refer to liberty-only (no-bundles-but-this-one). You’ve just got a different reason than that thick libertarianism is dangerous. You also can’t divorce matters of definition and labels from more substantial issues involving its application in the real world. This is not an exercise in pure reason.

  4. Black Bloke

    Safari MacIntosh

    “The first thing to point out about this objection is that it is not strictly correct to call it an objection to thick libertarianism. On the contrary, this objection is itself a version of thick libertarianism (we might call it “anti-thickness thickness”). “

    Are there any objections to thick libertarianism that are not themselves versions of thick libertarianism?

  5. Black Bloke

    Safari MacIntosh

    That’s what I get for reading this post while nearly asleep.

    From GAP’s post above (and the quote that it contains) I gather that the answer is no.

  6. Stephan Kinsella

    Firefox 3.0 MacIntosh

    Roderick:

    “Stephan, I never said libertarianism includes X or that libertarianism means Liberty-plus-X. That’s not what thick libertarianism says.”

    I can never be sure what it says, since it seems vague, imprecise, non-rigorous, and ever-shifting to me. Sometimes its proponents do imply this.

    “As for being a weak defense of thick libertarianism, I take the case for thick libertarianism as having already been made; this is just a supplement.”

    fair enough. I haven’t been convinced by these either, FWIW.

    “Anyway, a “straw man” is an argument nobody gives; lots of people do give this argument, so it’s not a straw man.”

    Also a good point. What I mean is I agree this is a bad argument, but defeating it does not mean there are no good criticisms of thickism.

  7. David Gordon

    Firefox 2.0.0.15 Windows XP

    Couldn’t the objector to thick libertarianism claim, not that he or she wishes to promote the achievement of a libertarian society , but that thick libertarians who also wish to promote the achievement of a libertarian society are at risk of tension in their goals? This seems to avoid the objection that the anti-thick libertarian has adopted a form of thick libertarianism: the argument would aim only at inducing thick libertarians to rethink their views.

  8. David Gordon

    Firefox 2.0.0.15 Windows XP

    No, it wouldn’t; in fact, the argument could be advanced by someone who was hostile to libertarianism, or who had no interest in it.

  9. Rad Geek

    Firefox 3.0 Windows Vista

    Roderick:

    So one can nonthickly argue that it’s not that case that we must be thicklib. But one can’t non-thickly argue that it is the case that we shouldn’t be thicklib.

    Well, thick libertarianism is the claim that libertarianism as such provides good reasons for libertarians to care about other commitments besides a rigorous commitment to non-aggression. So it’s true that if, for example, a would-be thin libertarian is arguing that we should abandon a particular nonviolently held philosophical view about libertarianism (viz. the thick conception of it) for, e.g., reasons of libertarian strategy, then she is really advancing a form of thick, not thin, libertarianism.

    But couldn’t a woud-be thin libertarian instead argue that we ought to abandon a particular nonviolently held philosophical view about libertarianism (viz. the thick conception of it) for other reasons distinct from and alongside our libertarian commitments? For example, that it should be abandoned for reasons of intellectual clarity, considered as desirable in itself rather than as a means to libertarian triumph or whatever else?

    If so, then, while I would certainly disagree with the argument for abandoning a thick conception of libertarianism, I wouldn’t think that the argument is internally contradictory. The appeal only becomes an appeal to thickness if the reasons being given are reasons that the libertarian is supposed to have qua libertarian, rather than (for example) qua philosopher or qua clear thinker.

  10. Mark S

    MSIE 7.0 Windows XP

    Rad Geek, so basically the argument is to keep it separated, not as a philosophical matter, but simply as a personal matter e.g. Don’t Spam.

    Reminds me of the Rothbard vs. Cato flap vis-à-vis nuclear energy.

    I’ve always wondered why the Rockwell crowd thought support for GMO and industrial agriculture was needed for true “libertarian” credentials.

  11. Micha Ghertner

    Firefox 3.0 Windows XP

    Rad Geek,

    Couldn’t a woud-be thick libertarian argue that we ought to adopt a particular philosophical view about libertarianism (viz. the thick conception of it) for other reasons distinct from and alongside our libertarian commitments? For example, that it should be adopted for reasons of intellectual clarity, considered as desirable in itself rather than as a means to libertarian triumph or whatever else?

    I never thought the sole justification for adopting a thick conception of libertarianism need be only on libertarian grounds.

    Or does thick libertarianism only describe those extra-libertarian views adopted solely for the sake of promoting libertarianism?

  12. rifit

    Firefox 3.0.4 Ubuntu

    You argue at Cato that gender and race inequity is state created. While part of it may be, this is a nurturist approach which ignores the biological differences between genders and races. You’re probably familiar with Rothbard’s “Egalitarianism as a Revolt Against Nature”; I think your commitment to equality undermines your commitment to liberty.