Some great books are the product of a lifetime of research, reflection, and labored discipline. But other classics are written in a white heat during the moment of discovery, with prose that shines forth like the sun pouring into the window of a time when a new understanding brings in the world into focus for the first time.
The Market for Liberty is that second type of classic, and what a treasure it is. Written by two authors—Morris and Linda Tannehill—just following a period of intense study of the writings of both Ayn Rand and Murray Rothbard, it has the pace, energy, and rigor you would expect from an evening's discussion with either of these two giants.
More than that, these authors put pen to paper at precisely the right time in their intellectual development, that period rhapsodic freshness when a great truth had been revealed, and they had to share it with the world. Clearly, the authors fell in love with liberty and the free market, and wrote an engaging, book-length sonnet to these ideas.
This book is very radical in the true sense of that term: it gets to the root of the problem of government and provides a rethinking of the whole organization of society. They start at the beginning with the idea of the individual and his rights, work their way through exchange and the market, expose government as the great enemy of mankind, and then—and here is the great surprise—they offer a dramatic expansion of market logic into areas of security and defense provision.
Their discussion of this controversial topic is integrated into their libertarian theoretical apparatus. It deals with private arbitration agencies in managing with disputes and criminality, the role of insurers in providing profitable incentives for security, and private agencies in their capacity as protection services. It is for this reason that Hans Hoppe calls this book an "outstanding yet much neglected analysis of the operation of competing security producers."
The section on war and the state is particularly poignant. "The more government 'defends' its citizens, the more it provokes tensions and wars, as unnecessary armies wallow carelessly about in distant lands and government functionaries, from the highest to the lowest, throw their weight around in endless, provocating power grabs. The war machine established by government is dangerous to both foreigners and its own citizens, and this machine can operate indefinitely without any effective check other than the attack of a foreign nation."
Also overlooked is the Tannehill's challenging plan for desocialization or transition to a full free society. They argue against privatization as it is usually understood, on grounds that government is not the owner of public property and so it cannot sell it. Public property should be seized or homesteaded by the workers or by people with the strongest interest it in, and then put on the open market. If that sounds crazy or chaotic, you might change your mind after reading their case.
What's remarkable is how this book actually predates Rothbard's For A New Liberty. In fact, Rothbard chose it as one of the top 20 libertarian books of all time, to be printed in his series for Arno Press. It had a huge impact when it came out in 1970, especially among the generation that was debating question of whether the state needed to provide "night watchman" functions or be eliminated all together.
The authors were drawn to Rand's ethical outlook but Rothbard's economics and politics. But, clearly, they were surrounded by classics of all ages when they wrote. So this fiery little treatise connected with the burgeoning movement at the time, providing just the type of integration that many were seeking.
Since the 1980s, however, the book has languished in obscurity. If the authors are still around, no one seems to have heard from them, a fact which seems only to add to the mystery of this never-to-be-repeated book.
Who should read this book? It makes a bracing read for a person who has never been introduced to these ideas. No reader could be left unchanged by it. For the person who has an appreciation of free enterprise, this book completes the picture, pushing the limits of market logic as far as it can go. For those who have been drawn to the argument concerning insurance agencies in the free market, this explanation is still the most extended in print.
Part I: The Great Conflict
1. If We Don't Know Where We're Going
2. Man and Society
3. The Self-Regulating Market
4. Government: An Unnecessary Evil
Part II: A Laissez-Faire Society
5. A Free and Healthy Economy
6. Property: The Great Problem Solver
7. Arbitration of Disputes
8. Protection of Life and Property
9. Dealing With Coercion
10. Rectification of Injustice
11. Warring Defense Agencies and Organized Crime
12. Legislation and Objective Law
13. Foreign Aggression
14. The Abolition of War
Part III: How Do We Get There?
15. From Government to Laissez Faire
16. The Force Which Shapes the World
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这本书简直让人欲罢不能,从翻开第一页开始,我就被深深地吸引住了。作者的叙事功力实在了得,他仿佛拥有魔力,能将那些看似寻常的场景描绘得栩栩如生,让人身临其境。整个故事的节奏把握得恰到好处,时而紧张刺激,让人屏住呼吸,时而又陷入对人物命运的沉思之中。最让我欣赏的是,作者对细节的关注达到了令人惊叹的程度,每一个细微的动作、每一个眼神的交流,都似乎蕴含着深层次的含义。读完之后,我感觉自己仿佛经历了一场漫长而深刻的旅程,心灵受到了极大的触动。这本书的语言风格非常独特,既有古典文学的韵味,又不失现代气息的流畅与活力,读起来是一种纯粹的享受。我强烈推荐给所有热爱深度阅读和复杂叙事的读者,它绝对值得你投入时间去细细品味。
评分说实话,这本书一开始读起来有些挑战性,它并不像那些快餐式的流行小说那样直接易懂。作者构建了一个极其复杂的世界观,初读时可能会有些迷茫,需要读者投入更多的耐心和精力去理解其中的脉络和规则。然而,一旦你适应了这种叙事方式,你会发现其背后隐藏的巨大魅力。那些错综复杂的人物关系、看似不经意的伏笔,都在后续的章节中得到了精妙的呼应和解答,这种“豁然开朗”的感觉是阅读其他作品时难以体会的。文字的密度非常高,每一个句子都承载了丰富的信息量,这要求读者必须全神贯注。对于那些追求智力挑战和深度思考的读者来说,这本书无疑是一座宝库,它不仅仅是在讲述一个故事,更像是在引导你进行一场智力上的探险。我花了很长时间来消化其中的哲学思辨,收获良多。
评分这本书的氛围营造简直是大师级的。从头到尾,一种挥之不去的、略带忧郁的宿命感笼罩着整个故事。作者似乎非常擅长利用环境描写来烘托人物的内心世界,无论是阴森的街道,还是空旷的荒野,都仿佛成了角色情感的延伸。阅读的过程中,我仿佛能闻到空气中的湿气,感受到微弱的寒意。更难得的是,尽管基调偏向沉重,但作者依然在字里行间流露出了对希望和坚持的赞美,这种在绝境中闪烁的微光,反而显得更加珍贵和动人。这本书不是那种能让你哈哈大笑的作品,但它会安静地占据你的内心,在你合上书本之后很长一段时间,那些场景和人物的影子依然会在你的脑海中徘徊不去,这种持久的感染力,正是优秀文学作品的标志。
评分我非常欣赏这本书的结构设计,它摒弃了传统的线性叙事,采用了多重时间线和视角的交织推进方式,这使得整个故事充满了悬念和回响。不同的章节似乎从不同的侧面描绘了同一个事件,直到最后才完美地拼凑出一个完整的图像,这种拼图式的阅读过程让人欲罢不能。语言风格上,作者的笔触非常精准,他知道何时该用简洁有力的短句来制造冲击,何时又该用华丽的长篇来渲染氛围。尤其值得称赞的是,作者成功地在宏大的叙事背景下,依然保留了对个体命运的细腻关注,使得读者在关注大局的同时,也能对书中那些小人物的命运感同身受。对于那些喜欢结构精巧、叙事技巧高超作品的读者,这本书绝对是不可错过的范本。
评分这本书带给我一种前所未有的阅读体验,它的情感张力简直是爆炸性的。作者对于人性阴暗面的挖掘极其深刻和毫不留情,他毫不回避地展示了角色们在极端压力下的真实反应和挣扎。我不得不承认,某些情节让我感到非常不适,甚至一度想要合上书本,但这正是它力量的体现——它迫使你直面那些你通常会选择逃避的东西。角色的塑造立体而矛盾,没有绝对的好人或坏人,每个人都有自己难以言说的苦衷和动机,这种真实感令人心痛却又着迷。读完后,我久久不能平静,感觉自己对“选择”与“代价”有了更深一层的理解。这不是一本能让你轻松愉快的书,但它绝对是一剂强效的精神催化剂,能让你对生活和人性产生更深刻的反思。
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