Free Society

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A01=Lansing Pollock
Author_Lansing Pollock
Basic Moral Rules
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Category=QD
Common Carrier
constitutional interpretation
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Federal Reserve
free market ethics
Freedom Principle
Golden Rule Arguments
Good Life
government regulation critique
Health Administration
Hypothetical Consent
Kantian moral philosophy
Libertarian Government
libertarian political theory
Libertarian Society
Libertarian Solution
Libertarian View
Line Item Veto
Materialistic Egalitarianism
moral equality in public policy
Noninterference Rule
Paid Social Security Taxes
Rational Contractors
Rawls's Principle
Resource Tax
Social Utility Support
Tuition Vouchers
Violate
welfare state analysis
Wo
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367292294
  • Weight: 500g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Sep 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In the tradition of Milton Friedman’s 1962 classic, Capitalism and Freedom, Lansing Pollock draws on moral, political, and economic theory to defend a libertarian vision of the good society. Pollock argues that mutual consent, derived from a fundamental Kantian moral equality, is the ideal standard for judging relations between persons. He contends that if the equal right of all persons to be free is taken seriously, most of the coercion by government that many take for granted is immoral. Pollock situates libertarian moral theory in an American historical context, one compatible with the views of James Madison and Thomas Jefferson. Pollock argues that when the Constitution is interpreted according to the political philosophy of the framers, the modern welfare state is unconstitutional. Pollock goes on to demonstrate how free market economies promote human well-being, whereas government regulation is often counterproductive. In advocating a reduction in the size and scope of government, Pollock includes applied policy analyses of poverty and health care, among other topical issues. He also offers an innovative solution to the problem of funding a limited government without violating individual rights. The strength of The Free Society lies in its synthetic achievement. In a book that is accessibly written and sure to appeal to scholar and lay reader alike, Pollock provides a compelling conception of the good society—one in which the libertarian vision includes moral, social, political, and economic perspectives.

Lansing Pollock is professor of philosophy at the State University College at Buffalo. He is the author of The Freedom Principle.

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