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Recent Additions
New Titles for FY 2013-14

New OLL Titles for 2013-14

Our plan is to expand our collection of books on 19th Century British Classical Liberal thought, especially works by the Philosophic Radicals and the Free Traders who contributed to The Economist magazine. Both groups were crucial in the development of classical liberal political and economic theory in the first half of the 19th century and both groups could claim that their ideas were instrumental in bringing about liberal reforms: the Philosophic Radicals were behind the political reforms which lead to the First Reform Act of 1832 which expanded the right to vote to the middle class for the first time, and the Free Traders were behind the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846 which began a 70 year period of free trade in Britain.

The OLL already has works by Jeremy Bentham, James Mill, David Ricardo, John Stuart Mill, and Richard Cobden, but this is not complete (for example James Mill’s political writings are not well represented) and there are other important figures whose work is not represented at all (William Cobbett, John Thelwall, John Wade, John Roebuck, and George Grote). It is alsoplanned that a representative sample of essays and reviews published in the leading free trade magazine of the period, The Economist, be added. The focus will be on the period of agitation for the repeal of the Corn Laws (1846), its implementation (1846-49), and aftermath when Thomas Hodgskin and Herbert Spencer worked for the magazine under the editorship of James Wilson (1844-57).

These titles will enrich the OLL collection by adding significant works which lay behind the important liberal political, legal, and economic reforms which made the 19th century the heyday of classical liberalism.

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Roderick Long, "Gustave de Molinari’s Legacy for Liberty" (May, 2013)

 

“GUSTAVE DE MOLINARI'S LEGACY FOR LIBERTY” (May, 2013)
Gustave de Molinari (1819-1912)
Title Page of the original 1849 edition

 

The Debate

Summary:

This discussion had its beginnings in a Liberty Fund conference on Molinari which was held in late 2012, the centennial year of his death. The discussants here were also at that conference and showed considerable interest in continuing that conversation online. Some of the topics which were raised at the conference were the following: Molinari between conservatism and socialism, eminent domain and the rights of labor, the competitive provision of security, religion and ethics, the evanescence of war, and the rise of autonomous communities. In his Lead Essay Roderick Long assesses Molinari's legacy, giving him a "hit" for his work on the competitive provision of security, his proposal for a system of labor exchanges, and his opposition to war and empire; and a "miss" for the weakness of the moral foundation of his philosophy, his hedonistic assumptions about human psychology, the historical inadequacy of his theory of political and economic evolution, and his theory of "tutelage" for those groups he believed were not yet ready for liberty. Long concludes that “for all his shortcomings, Molinari remains not only an interesting historical thinker, but also a vital lodestar for the liberty movement today.”

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