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  1. Albert Jay Nock (October 13, 1870 – August 19, 1945) was an American libertarian author, editor first of The Freeman and then The Nation, educational theorist, Georgist, and social critic of the early and middle 20th century.

  2. Jul 4, 2000 · Albert Jay Nock, author, aesthete, and social critic, was an advocate of liberty in a collectivist age. Jim Powell. History. American individualism had virtually died out by the time Mark Twain was buried in 1910. “Progressive” intellectuals promoted collectivism.

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  4. What matters is not when and where he lived and died — (OK, 1870 to 1945) — but what he wrote and thought. Albert Jay Nock was an editor and author of many articles in well-read journals of his time. He is best known, though, for two of his enduring books, Memoirs of a Superfluous Man, and Our Enemy the State.

  5. Albert Jay Nock: A Gifted Pen for Radical Individualism. Nock Deserves Considerable Credit for the Endurance of Individualism. Biographies. Collectivism. Statism. Taxation. Jim Powell. Thanks to Edmund A. Opitz, Jack Schwartzman, and Robert M. Thornton for helping to secure scarce materials on Nock.

  6. Albert Jay Nock (October 13, 1870 – August 19, 1945) was an American libertarian author, editor, and social critic. Renowned for his fierce opposition to state influence, his philosophical outlook challenged prevailing notions of governance and societal organization.

  7. Encyclopedia. Albert Jay Nock was one of the most thoroughgoing critics of using “political means” to achieve social ends in the American literary tradition. Libertarians have embraced Nocks often virulent antistatism, but his possession of the traits he ascribed to Jefferson—“radical principles and ideals combined with Tory manners ...

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