World History
The Sanctuary Society and its Enemies
Two fundamental principles of Western law had their origins in Mosaic Israel. The first principle was the rule of law and the second principle was open immigration.
The Sovereign State at Bay
Among serious readers of his work, Carl Schmitt (1888-1985) is known as an analyst of the European sovereign state.
Revolution of Reason: Peter Gray, the Enlightenment, and the Ambiguities of Classical Liberalism
In his seminal essay “Left and Right: The Prospects for Liberty“, Professor Rothbard delineated a libertarian interpretation o
Alienation of a Home-land: How Palestine Became Israel
The crux of the Arab-Israeli conflict is the Palestinian question, and the crux of the Palestinian question is: who justly owns the land of Israel
Social Science: Making Visible the Invisible Hands
In this paper, Antony Flew discusses Marx and Engels, Adam Smith, and social science.
Volume 8, Number 2 (1987)
A Laissez-Faire Fable of the Czech Republic
It is the task of this paper to describe what can happen to “a good cause” when it is “ineptly defended,” and to address the problem of the relatio
Those “Impossible Citizens”: Civil Resistants in 19th Century New England
Most libertarians view civil disobedience or resistance to the State differently than members of the general public.
American Isolationism, 1939-1941
The isolationist tradition in America, as it was manifested from 1939 to 1941, was based on two fundamental doctrines: avoidance of war in Europe and unimpaired freedom of action.
The Epoch of National Socialism
In two by-elections in the spring of 1996, the Front National (FN), the party of the radical right in France, helped several candidates of the left