Kinsella On Liberty
Stephan Kinsella
Austro-Anarchist Libertarian Legal Theory
Episodes
Mentioned books
May 4, 2013 • 1h 46min
KOL050 | “Libertarian Controversies Lecture 6” (Mises Academy, 2011)
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 050.
This is lecture 6 (of 6) of my 2011 Mises Academy course “Libertarian Controversies.” This talk continued lecture 5, which covered "Controversies and Conundrums," such as monarchy vs. democracy, discrimination and diversity, immigration, incitement and causation (cont.), property rights, legal and logical positivism, fraud, contracts and inalienability, self-ownership, creation and the source of rights, and common libertarian misconceptions and mistakes such as scarcity vs. nonrivalry, states' rights, loser-pays system, an educational voucher system, push the button hypos, rights as a subset of morals, spam as aggression, the danger of metaphors and equivocation, working for the state, shrinkwrap, clickwrap, and fine print in contracts, federalism, left vs. rights, activism, use of courts, forgiving crimes, abandoned property, fractional reserve banking, inalienability/voluntary slavery, mutualism, relevant technological unit, the Lockean proviso, the Blockean proviso, Rothbard on copyright, Constitutional sentimentalism, Georgism, strategy, thick vs. thin, and other issues. Slides for this lecture are appended below (also used for lecture 5).
For background information, links to recommended reading, and audio and slides for all six lectures, see KOL 045 | “Libertarian Controversies Lecture 1" (Mises Academy, 2011).
Update: The videos of all six lectures are now available here; the video for this particular lecture is embedded below.
May 4, 2013 • 1h 32min
KOL049 | “Libertarian Controversies Lecture 5” (Mises Academy, 2011)
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 049.
This is lecture 5 (of 6) of my 2011 Mises Academy course “Libertarian Controversies.” This talk covered "Controversies and Conundrums," such as monarchy vs. democracy, discrimination and diversity, immigration, incitement and causation (cont.), property rights, legal and logical positivism, fraud, contracts and inalienability, self-ownership, creation and the source of rights, and common libertarian misconceptions and mistakes such as scarcity vs. nonrivalry, states' rights, loser-pays system, an educational voucher system, push the button hypos, rights as a subset of morals, spam as aggression, the danger of metaphors and equivocation, working for the state, shrinkwrap, clickwrap, and fine print in contracts, federalism, left vs. rights, activism, use of courts, forgiving crimes, abandoned property, fractional reserve banking, inalienability/voluntary slavery, mutualism, relevant technological unit, the Lockean proviso, the Blockean proviso, Rothbard on copyright, Constitutional sentimentalism, Georgism, strategy, thick vs. thin, and other issues. Slides for this lecture are appended below (also used for lecture 6).
For background information, links to recommended reading, and audio and slides for all six lectures, see KOL 045 | “Libertarian Controversies Lecture 1" (Mises Academy, 2011). The remaining lectures will be released here in the podcast feed in upcoming days.
Update: See KOL395 | Selling Does Not Imply Ownership, and Vice-Versa: A Dissection (PFS 2022).
Update: The videos of all six lectures are now available here; the video for this particular lecture is embedded below.
May 3, 2013 • 1h 51min
KOL048 | “Libertarian Controversies Lecture 4” (Mises Academy, 2011)
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 048.
This is lecture 4 (of 6) of my 2011 Mises Academy course “Libertarian Controversies.” This talk covered "Misconceptions and Controversies," such as positive vs. negative obligations, contracts vs. promises, incitement and causation, and other issues. Slides for this lecture are appended below.
For background information, links to recommended reading, and audio and slides for all six lectures, see KOL 045 | “Libertarian Controversies Lecture 1" (Mises Academy, 2011). The remaining lectures will be released here in the podcast feed in upcoming days.
Update: The videos of all six lectures are now available here; the video for this particular lecture is embedded below.
May 3, 2013 • 1h 46min
KOL047 | “Libertarian Controversies Lecture 3” (Mises Academy, 2011)
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 047.
This is lecture 3 (of 6) of my 2011 Mises Academy course “Libertarian Controversies.” This talk covered "Even More Misconceptions," such as state vs. government, "limited" government, Hoppe on monarchy vs. democracy, federalism, restitution and punishment, positive obligations, and other issues. Slides for this lecture are appended below.
For background information, links to recommended reading, and audio and slides for all six lectures, see KOL 045 | “Libertarian Controversies Lecture 1" (Mises Academy, 2011). The remaining lectures will be released here in the podcast feed in upcoming days.
Update: The videos of all six lectures are now available here; the video for this particular lecture is embedded below.
May 3, 2013 • 1h 39min
KOL046 | “Libertarian Controversies Lecture 2” (Mises Academy, 2011)
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 046.
This is lecture 2 (of 6) of my 2011 Mises Academy course “Libertarian Controversies.” This talk covered more common libertarian misconceptions such as PDA jurisdiction, Big-L vs. small-l libertarianism and other misused terms, non-aggression "axiom" or principle, and other issues. Slides for this lecture are appended below.
For background information, links to recommended reading, and audio and slides for all six lectures, see KOL 045 | “Libertarian Controversies Lecture 1" (Mises Academy, 2011). The remaining lectures will be released here in the podcast feed in upcoming days.
Update: The videos of all six lectures are now available here; the video for this particular lecture is embedded below.
May 2, 2013 • 1h 49min
KOL045 | “Libertarian Controversies Lecture 1” (Mises Academy, 2011)
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 045.
This is lecture 1 (of 6) of my 2011 Mises Academy course “Libertarian Controversies.” This lecture contained an overview of basic austro-libertarian concepts and started discussing various libertarian "misconceptions," regarding the left-right spectrum, coercion and force vs. aggression, the jurisdiction of private defense agencies, and related issues. I’ll release the remaining lectures here in the podcast feed in upcoming days.
This course followed on my speech "Correcting some Common Libertarian Misconceptions," from the 2011 Annual Meeting of the Property and Freedom Society (May 27-29, 2011; see KOL 044 | “Correcting some Common Libertarian Misconceptions” (PFS 2011)). That talk engendered a good deal of discussion and interest, but in the time allotted for a single speech I was able to cover only a small number of the topics I had assembled over the years. In the 6 week Mises Academy course, “Libertarian Controversies” (Sept. 19-Oct. 23, 2011), I covered these and related topics in greater depth. The course was planned for 5 weeks initially, but I added a sixth "bonus" lecture at student request. The course is discussed in my Mises Daily article “Libertarian Controversies” (Aug. 25, 2011); here are the audio and slides for all six lectures. The “suggested readings” for this lecture are appended below.
Update: see also
KOL185: Clarifying Libertarian Theory (Liberty.me, July 2014)
KOL 044 | “Correcting some Common Libertarian Misconceptions” (PFS 2011)
SUGGESTED READING MATERIAL
General background readings are below; other particular links are provided in the slides for each lecture:
Recommended Background Readings
Kinsella, “What Libertarianism Is"
Kinsella, "Libertarian Controversies"
Hoppe, A Theory of Socialism and Capitalism [TSC], chapters 1-2, 7
Optional Background Readings
Rothbard, For A New Liberty [FaNL] and Ethics of Liberty [EoL] (both strongly recommended)
Huebert, Libertarianism Today (Scribd free version; Vance’s review; Kinsella review
Rockwell & Rothbard, eds., The Free Market Reader
Walter Block, Defending the Undefendable
Frederic Bastiat, The Law
Milton Friedman, Capitalism and Freedom
Linda & Morris Tannehill, The Market for Liberty
Lysander Spooner, No Treason No. VI: The Constitution of No Authority
Ayn Rand, Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal
Kinsella
What It Means To Be an Anarcho-Capitalist
How We Come To Own Ourselves
Causation and Aggression
Punishment and Proportionality: The Estoppel Approach
Inalienability and Punishment: A Reply to George Smith
Argumentation Ethics and Liberty: A Concise Guide
Defending Argumentation Ethics: Reply to Murphy & Callahan
New Rationalist Directions in Libertarian Rights Theory
Against Intellectual Property
The Case Against IP: A Concise Guide
The Trouble with Libertarian Activism
Legislation and the Discovery of Law in a Free Society
Summary version: Legislation and Law in a Free Society
Recommended Background Readings: Other
David Friedman, The Machinery of Freedom
Gary Chartier, The Conscience of an Anarchist
Bruno Leoni, Freedom and the Law
Bastiat, The Law; Economic Sophisms and Economic Harmonies
Charles Murray, What it Means to be a Libertarian
David Boaz, Libertarianism: A Primer; The Libertarian Reader: Classic and Contemporary Writings from Lao Tzu to Milton FriedmanRichard Epstein, Simple Rules for a Complex World
Jeffery Miron, Libertarianism, from A to Z
Optional Background Readings: Bibliographies
Hoppe, Anarcho-Capitalism: An annotated bibliography
Kinsella, The Greatest Libertarian Books
David Gordon on Liberty
Lew Rockwell on Reading for Liberty
Others at LRC Bibliographies
Update: The videos of all six lectures are now available here; the video for this particular lecture is embedded below.
May 2, 2013 • 1h 5min
KOL044 | “Correcting some Common Libertarian Misconceptions” (PFS 2011)
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 044.
This is my speech "Correcting Some Common Libertarian Misconceptions," delivered on May 28, 2011, at the Annual Meeting of the Property and Freedom Society. The video is here, and streamed below; here is the powerpoint presentation. Re-presented as PFP076.
Transcript available here.
Related:
KOL 045 | “Libertarian Controversies Lecture 1” (Mises Academy, 2011)
KOL023 | “Libertarian Legal Theory: Property, Conflict, and Society: Lecture 6: Applications Continued; Common Libertarian Mistakes (Fraud Etc.)” (Mises Academy, 2011)
KOL206 | Tom Woods Show: Five Mistakes Libertarians Make
KOL185: Clarifying Libertarian Theory (Liberty.me, July 2014)
KOL118 | Tom Woods Show: Against Fuzzy Thinking
[This speech was discussed previously on the Mises blog with extensive comments, and also on my blog]
Update: Thanks to Joseph Fetz with help cleaning up the original audio file.
Update:
other libertarian confusions: opposing co-ownership and self-ownership:
Libertarian Answer Man: Co-ownership and Ownership and Punishment of Criminals
“Libertarians” Who Object to “Self-Ownership”
Voluntaryist Association, THE CONTRADICTION OF MULTI-PERSON OWNERSHIP (October 24, 2022)
Apr 26, 2013 • 1h 7min
KOL043 | Triple-V: Voluntary Virtues Vodcast, with Michael Shanklin: Bitcoin, Legal Reform, Morality of Voting, Rothbard on Copyright
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 043.
This is my appearance on Michael Shanklin’s Triple-V: Voluntary Virtues Vodcast with Michael Shanklin (April 25, 2013). We discussed a variety of issues, including: Bitcoin, the police state, legal reform (jury nullification, loser-pays rules), the morality of voting, Rothbard on copyright (for more: see Against Intellectual Property, "Contract vs. Reserved Rights" section, and Rothbard’s “High Tech ‘Crime’: A Call for Papers” (1983)), the history of patent and copyright (for more: see Karl Fogel's article The Surprising History of Copyright and The Promise of a Post-Copyright World), and other issues.
Our previous discussion: KOL 025 | Triple-V: Voluntary Virtues Vodcast, with Michael Shanklin: Intellectual Property, Ron Paul vs RonPaul.Com, Aaron Swartz, Corporatism.
Apr 19, 2013 • 26min
KOL042 | “Estoppel: A New Justification for Individual Rights” (audio)
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 042.
This is a reading of my paper "Estoppel: A New Justification for Individual Rights," which was published in Reason Papers No. 17 (Fall 1992). It was narrated by Carlos Morales on the Renegade Variety Hour podcast (April 18, 2013).
This was the first of my libertarian theory works and a precursor to other articles such as "Punishment and Proportionality: The Estoppel Approach," Journal of Libertarian Studies 12:1 (Spring 1996), "New Rationalist Directions in Libertarian Rights Theory," Journal of Libertarian Studies 12:2 (Fall 1996), and “Argumentation Ethics and Liberty: A Concise Guide,” Mises Daily (May 27, 2011) (the latter of which includes “Discourse Ethics and Liberty: A Skeletal Ebook”).
Apr 17, 2013 • 1h
KOL041 | Bad Quaker Interview re (what else?) Intellectual Property
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 041.
This is from Episode 367 of the Bad Quaker podcast, with Ben Stone.


