Today’s the 13th anniversary of the Molinari Institute. Coming up in the next few months from our fledgling publishing program: my Foundations of Ethics lectures, some 19th-century libertarian classics, and the first issue of the Molinari Review.
Today’s the 13th anniversary of the Molinari Institute. Coming up in the next few months from our fledgling publishing program: my Foundations of Ethics lectures, some 19th-century libertarian classics, and the first issue of the Molinari Review.
You write quite a bit about ethics (virtue ethics in particular) – in what way do you think such a formalized idea of ethics is needed for anarchy? Granted, Proudhon was very Kantian, most modern-day anarchists are distinctly humanist, but I’m curious nonetheless.
If a group of people lack even a minimal set of common ethical beliefs can they rightly be called a society? Or is your objection to the formalization?
Why the emphasis on “ethics”? Or does “ethics” just mean “commonly shared beliefs” in your view?
Really looking forward to the ethics book, Roderick–pretty awesome!
Great! I can finally properly cite the ethics lectures
Those lectures converted me to full-on libertarian anarchism 7 years ago. Thanks again, and always.
Looking forward to having them in written form!