The Journal of Libertarian Studies

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Life, Liberty, and . . . : Jefferson on Property Rights

The Journal of Libertarian Studies

Tags U.S. HistoryPolitical TheoryPrivate Property

07/30/2014Luigi Marco Bassani

Surveys of libertarian-leaning individuals in America show that the intellectual champions they venerate the most are Thomas Jefferson and Ayn Rand. The author of the Declaration of Independence is an inspiring source for individuals longing for liberty all around the world, since he was a devotee of individual rights, freedom of choice, limited government, and, above all, the natural origin, and thus the inalienable character, of a personal right to property.

However, such libertarian-leaning individuals might be surprised to learn that, in academic circles, Jefferson is depicted as a proto-socialist, the advocate of simple majority rule, and a powerful enemy of the wicked “possessive individualism” that permeated the revolutionary period and the early republic.

Volume 18, Number 1 (2004)

Author:

Luigi Marco Bassani

Marco Bassani is professor of history of political theory at the University of Milan.

Cite This Article

Bassani, Luigi M. "Life, Liberty, and . . . : Jefferson on Property Rights." Journal of Libertarian Studies 18, No. 1 (2004): 31–87.