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==See also== ==See also==

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The Machinery of Freedom: Guide to a Radical Capitalism
File:Book Machinery of Freedom 3rd Ed David Friedman.jpgPaperback
AuthorDavid D. Friedman
LanguageEnglish
PublisherOpen Court Publishing Company
Publication date1973; 2nd edition 1989; 3rd edition 2014
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePaperback, Electronic
ISBNISBN 0-8126-9069-9 Parameter error in {{ISBNT}}: invalid character
OCLC19388655
Dewey Decimal323.44 19
LC ClassJC585 .F76 1989

The Machinery of Freedom is a nonfiction book by David D. Friedman which advocates Friedman's vision of an anarcho-capitalist society. The book was published in 1973, with a second edition in 1989 and a third edition in 2014.

Overview

The book calls for the abolition or privatization of all government functions, details suggestions for many specific instances of privatization, explores the consequences of libertarian thought, describes examples of libertarian society (such as the Icelandic Commonwealth), and offers the author's personal statement about why he became a libertarian. Topics addressed in the book include the privatization of law (both legislation and enforcement), and the knotty problem of providing for public goods (such as national defense) in a purely libertarian society. Friedman argues that anarcho-capitalism will be beneficial to the vast majority, including the poor.

While some books supporting similar libertarian and anarcho-capitalist views offer evidence in terms of morality or natural rights, Friedman (although he explicitly denies being a utilitarian) here argues largely in terms of the effects of his proposed policies.

Friedman conjectures that anything done by government costs at least twice as much as a privately provided equivalent. He offers examples as evidence, such as a comparison of the cost of the U.S. Postal Service's costs for package delivery with the costs of private carriers and the cost of the Soviet government versus market based services in the West.

Reception from libertarians

The Institute of Public Affairs, a libertarian think tank located in Australia, included The Machinery of Freedom in a list of the "Top 20 books you must read before you die" in 2006.

Liberty magazine named the book among The Top Ten Best Libertarian Books, praising Friedman for tackling the problems related to private national defense systems and attempting to solve them.

Related books

See also

Notes

  1. Second Edition, pg. 165
  2. Second Edition, pg. 85
  3. Second Edition, pg. 85

References

  1. Rothbard, Murray N. (July 1977). "Do You Hate the State?" (PDF). The Libertarian Forum. Peden, Joseph R. ISSN 0047-4517. Retrieved July 12, 2014 – via Ludwig von Mises Institute.
  2. Caré, Sébastien. "Anarcho-capitalism and Moral Philosophy: Deontological versus Consequentialist Ethics". Anarchist Studies Network. Retrieved July 12, 2014. Friedman states the 'law' that anything done by government costs at least twice as much as a privately provided equivalent.
  3. Shearmur, Jeremy. Institute of Public Affairs Review, July 2006, Vol. 58, Issue 2, p. 28, 1/3p (AN 22056148)
  4. Vavasour, Liam (September 2006). Cox, Stephen (ed.). "Ten Great Books of Liberty" (PDF). Liberty. 20 (9): 21–33. Retrieved July 12, 2014.
  5. Kinsella, Stephan (August 3, 2006). "Top Ten Books of Liberty". Ludwig von Mises Institute. Retrieved July 12, 2014.

External links

Anarcho-capitalism
Origins
Concepts
  • Anti-statism
  • Civil rights
  • Corporate governance
  • Counter-economics
  • Decentralization
  • Departurism
  • Deregulation
  • Economic liberalism
  • Evictionism
  • Free market
  • Free-market roads
  • Free trade
  • Freedom of contract
  • Individualism
  • Jurisdictional arbitrage
  • Laissez-faire
  • Land tenure
  • Market anarchism
  • Natural law
  • Non-aggression principle
  • Polycentric law
  • Private defense (Army (Company / list), Intelligence, Investigator, Police, Security)
  • Private property
  • Privatization
  • Propertarianism
  • Property rights
  • Right to property
  • Self-ownership
  • Spontaneous order
  • Title-transfer theory of contract
  • Voluntaryism
  • People
  • Bruce L. Benson
  • Walter Block
  • Bryan Caplan
  • Gerard Casey
  • Anthony de Jasay
  • David D. Friedman
  • Hans-Hermann Hoppe
  • Michael Huemer
  • Stephan Kinsella
  • Nick Land
  • Michael Malice
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  • Robert P. Murphy
  • Wendy McElroy
  • Lew Rockwell
  • Murray Rothbard
  • Joseph Salerno
  • Jeffrey Tucker
  • Tom Woods
  • Curtis Yarvin
  • Works
  • The Market for Liberty (1970)
  • For a New Liberty (1973)
  • The Machinery of Freedom (1973)
  • Defending the Undefendable (1976)
  • The Ethics of Liberty (1982)
  • To Serve and Protect (1998)
  • Democracy: The God That Failed (2001)
  • The Myth of the Rational Voter (2007)
  • The Voluntary City (2002)
  • The Problem of Political Authority (2012)
  • Issues
    Related topics
  • Accelerationism
  • Agorism
  • Paleo-libertarianism
  • Right-libertarianism
  • Libertarianism in the United States
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