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  1. Edward Stringham opined that: "In the late 1940s, Murray Rothbard decided that that [sic] private-property anarchism was the logical conclusion of free-market thinking [...]." [124] Rothbard began to consider himself a "private property anarchist" [ citation needed ] and published works about private property anarchism in 1954; [124] later, in ...

  2. 7813705. Dewey Decimal. 323.44/01 19. LC Class. JC585 .R69 1982. The Ethics of Liberty is a 1982 book by American philosopher and economist Murray N. Rothbard, [1] in which the author expounds a libertarian political position. [2] Rothbard's argument is based on a form of natural law ethics, [3] and makes a case for anarcho-capitalism.

    • Murray Newton Rothbard
    • United States
    • 1982
    • English
  3. Jul 4, 2000 · It was cut by 700 pages, and Rothbard wrote a new ending. The book, which filled two volumes, appeared in 1962. Rothbard explained how market incentives spur the development of a complex, successful social order. He emphasized how markets and market prices are ultimately determined not by businesses but by consumers.

  4. Aug 15, 2008 · (Rothbard credited the 19th- century Belgian author Gustave de Molinari as the intellectual father of this individualist anarchist view, which encompassed justice and defense.) Rothbard rejected Mises’s utilitarian ethics as an insufficient basis for a consistent libertarianism. In 1982, he published a defense of his entire intellectual edifice.

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  6. Murray Newton Rothbard (/ ˈ r ɒ θ b ɑːr d /; March 2, 1926 – January 7, 1995) was an American heterodox economist of the Austrian School, historian, and a political theorist (pp11, 286, 380) whose writings and personal influence played a seminal role in the development of modern right-libertarianism.

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