My review for Reason.com of Elizabeth Brakes Minimizing Marriage: Marriage, Morality, and the Law is now online.
Ive also blogged thereon at BHL.
But what I really want to know is: can I marry a corporation?
My review for Reason.com of Elizabeth Brakes Minimizing Marriage: Marriage, Morality, and the Law is now online.
Ive also blogged thereon at BHL.
But what I really want to know is: can I marry a corporation?
Check out David Gordons critique of Hans-H… I mean, Stefan Molyneux.
I partly agree with this and partly disagree with it, being more sympathetic to PC than Jeremy is; and I dont think putting pressure on bigots is automatically oppressive in the negative sense, let alone totalitarian. (By analogy, defensive violence is not on the same moral level as aggressive violence.) But this is still one of the more thoughtful discussions of the issue Ive seen.
My sincere apologies for the title of this post.
Heres the cool cover for Gary Chartiers excellent forthcoming book Anarchy and Legal Order: Law and Politics for a Stateless Society (originally titled Anarchy Under Law):
Check out the publisher page and Amazon page. And start saving your pennies! (Saving 55 pennies per day between now and the publication date should do it.)
The Fall 2012 meeting of the Alabama Philosophical Society will be October 5-6 in Pensacola, Florida.
Papers can be submitted either to the regular program or to the undergraduate essay contest. Submission deadline: 7/27; hotel reservation deadline: 9/10. More details on the website.
As everyone knows, Herbert Spencer was a reactionary defender of capitalism and an opponent of socialism, while Thomas Hodgskin was a proto-Marxian defender of socialism and an opponent of capitalism; so what should one expect from Hodgskins review (now online) of Spencers Social Statics?
The right answer, it turns out, is almost total agreement: there are very few conclusions or remarks to which we are disposed to object. And the one point for which Hodgskin does take Spencer to task is Spencers rejection of private ownership of land.
Its almost as though traditional political categories are mistaken somehow ….
Incidentally, although Hodgskin makes some good points in his discussion of land (some of which are reminiscent of Dave Schmidtzs work), I dont think he quite sees the force of Spencers arguments. Spencer worries that if private land ownership were permissible, the entire earth could theoretically fall into private hands, whereupon the nonowners would be at the mercy of the owners since while on other peoples property you have to do as they say or leave, and when leaving is impossible all thats left is doing what they say. (Note, by the way, that Spencers worry is not that this would be a likely result. His worry is rather that the principle of land ownership gives the wrong answer to the question of what would be legitimate in the described situation; it says that the owners demanding whatever they like of the nonowners would be just, while the Law of Equal Freedom says it would be unjust.)
To this Hodgskin replies that nonowners would not be at the mercy of owners, because there are other ways of making a living besides farming: what use is possession of the land to seamen, locomotive carriage drivers, and waggoners? But Spencers point is not merely that nonowners would need permission from the owners in order to cultivate the soil; his point is that nonowners would need permission from the owners in order to sit, stand, or move. Hence Hodgskins waggoners and locomotive carriage drivers will be at the mercy of those whose land they have to cross, as will seamen if they need trees to make their ships out of. (At any rate, the force of Spencers thought experiment should cover hypothetical situations without navigable waters.)
Hodgskin is also unimpressed by Spencers insistence that nonowners would be at the mercy of owners, since, as Hodgskin points out, we are all at each others mercy anyway. But this likewise misses Spencers point, which is not the pragmatic worry that nonowners would in fact be at the mercy of owners, but rather the ethical worry that nonowners would be legitimately at the mercy of owners. My life may depend on other peoples not killing me, but my right to life does not.
I think Spencers worry can be answered, but the key to answering it lies in challenging the claim that if all the earth were private property, the owners could then demand whatever they wanted of the nonowners. As Ive argued elsewhere:
Even when A has a right to recover some property in Bs possession, there are limits to the harm A can inflict in exercising this right. If you swallow my diamond ring, I do not have the right to cut you open to get it out, possibly killing you or causing serious injury. If you are trespassing on my property, I do not have the right to shove you off my front lawn and onto the street at the precise moment that a truck is coming that would flatten you. … Hence Spencer is mistaken in thinking that under private ownership his hypothetical lords of the soil could legitimately deny nonowners a right to exist ….
Spencer argues against trying to solve the problem by building into property rights an exception clause for extreme situations. I dont have quite the same horror of exception clauses that he has, but in any case my suggestion is not an exception clause, but rather a proportionality requirement that is always in force.
A point Im surprised that Hodgskin didnt raise is the difficulty of reconciling Spencers views on land with his right to ignore the state. If everyone pays rent to society for their land, who is authorised to collect that rent?
P.S. – I wish Hodgskin had elaborated on his other points of difference (he says there are a few, but none as major as the land issue).
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