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Libertarian Autobiographies

There are three collections I’m aware of, of people notable enough for inclusion in such but not major enough figures to warrant their own biographies (e.g. Rothbard, Mises).

  1. Kinsella, “How I Became A Libertarian,” LewRockwell.com (Dec. 18, 2002), also in Legal Foundations of a Free Society (Houston, Texas: Papinian Press, 2023); see also Alan D. Bergman, Adopting Liberty: The Stephan Kinsella Story (Papinian Press, 2025). []
  2. The Academic Publishing Paywall Copyright Subsidized Racket;  Tucker, The Magic of Open-Source PublishingKulldorff, The Rise and Fall of Scientific Journals and a Way ForwardAuthors: Don’t Make the Buddy Holly MistakeAcademic publishers have become the enemies of science: yet more real piracy; Authors: Beware of Copyright,” in Bourbon for Breakfast (Mises Institute, 2010). []
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As I note here, the latest PFS book has just been published by Sebastian Wang and his Hampden Press, co-published with the Property and Freedom Society.

Freedom Under the Sun, Gabb, Wang, coverSebastian Wang, Freedom Under the Sun: Proceedings of the Property and Freedom Society, Bodrum, 2025, edited and with an introduction by Sean Gabb (Hampden Press and Property and Freedom Society, 2025). It is available in paper, Kindle, and audiobook (Amazon.com).

My foreword is below. [continue reading…]

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Among libertarians I am known most for my intellectual property (IP) and general libertarian theorizing, as in my books Legal Foundations of a Free Society (Papinian Press, 2023), Against Intellectual Property (Mises Institute, 2008) and other publications. In my libertarian writing and theorizing I have tried to blend my practical and theoretical legal knowledge (of IP law, oil & gas law, international law, Roman/Louisiana/civil law, and common law) with libertarian and Austrian economics scholarship and insights.

I viewed this “libertarian legal” writing as my hobby or avocation, although I devoted a lot of time to this research and writing, and in retirement it is what occupies much of my time and attention. In my vocation, 1 I also practiced law for over thirty years, initially in the fields of oil and gas and international law, then specializing in IP and patent law, and general commercial law as general counsel of a high-tech company. [continue reading…]

  1. Career Advice by North. []
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Objectivists and other statists like to retreat to emotivism and irrelevant issues like manners when debating with libertarian anarchists. The low-IQ Jan Helfeld tried this tack when I debated him years ago. He was upset that I would follow his ridiculous debate rules, to which I retorted that he favors taxing me so he is worse. It led to some pretty funny exchanges. See below. [continue reading…]

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Bylund, Minarchism Is Statism Lite

Per Bylund, “Minarchism Is Statism Lite,” Mises Wire (Nov. 4, 2025)

It may be true that lovers of liberty, originally steeped in society’s preferred form of social democracy, must travel along the spectrum of the state via small (“minimal”) before reaching the conclusion that the state must go. But logically, this is not the case. To cure cancer, it is not necessary to reduce the size of a tumor bit by bit. The cure is to remove it. Similarly, if a rock upsets the flow of a stream, the solution is not to change the size or shape of the rock, to make it more streamlined, but to simply remove it. [continue reading…]

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See posts from Adam Haman below.

Related: re the Flagpole:

[continue reading…]

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Re Vibhu Vikramaditya, “A Blueprint for Decentralized Legal Order: How a Constitutional Floor Can Save Indian Law,” Sindhanaithinktank – Medium (Oct 3, 2025)

Related:

Interesting new article recently called to my attention. See link and excerpts below. Some of the Twitter frother: [continue reading…]

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Related:

Adam Haman, Misunderstanding the NAP: LiquidZulu attacks Dave Smith… and punches himself in the face. Adam Haman, Haman Nature substack (Nov. 13, 2025)

I just watched (because I’m a masochist) a video over 3 hours in length by a fellow with the handle “LiquidZulu (LZ)”. He used that time to blast Dave Smith for being unsound on libertarian theory and “afraid to debate him” or something. [continue reading…]

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Conversation with Block: Binding Promises, Voluntary Slavery

Related:

From an email discussion with Walter.

I forwarded this email to Walter, that I had sent to some friends. [continue reading…]

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Modugno, The Legacy of Murray N. Rothbard

Roberta Adelaide Modugno, The Legacy of Murray N. Rothbard: Libertarian and Austrian Economist (Springer, 2025) (Amazon), has just been published. This is a translation of the Italian version published in 2022. I just bought my copy.

Overview:

  • Examines how the social and political conditions of the time influenced Rothbard’s ideas and led him to libertarianism
  • Outlines Rothbard’s contributions to Austrian economics and the continued importance of his work and ideas
  • Explores Rothbard’s engagement with political and social issues, including his opposition to the Vietnam War

[continue reading…]

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Kinsella Notebook, LSU BSEE Final Semester (1987)

I stumbled across some pages I had scanned from my notebook for my final semester or so of my first degree, my BSEE at LSU, Fall 1986 and Spring 1987 semesters. My courses included:

  • Real Time Computer Systems EE 4770 (Dr. Klinkachorn, Docka Klink)
  • Digital Integrated Circuits EE 4250 (Burke Huner)
  • Introductory Sociology SOCL 2001
  • History of Contemporary America HIST 4065 (Culbert) (with my friend Ben Favrot, or “Fartov”.)

I liked to doodle a lot and was at the time fascinated with Douglas Hofstadter’s “Ambigrams,” making words with mirror images of themselves. (Metamagical Themas; Ambigram (Wikipedia); My Life in Ambigrammia; Ambigrammia.) Nicknames and pet names like Faggot Lip, Smoochball, and so on. Many of my EE buddies were in these classes–Ben Favrot (“Fish”), Chris LeBlanc (“Duck Butter”), Damon Smith, Sal Bernadas, Jimmy1, Jimmy2, “Booger” Wayne LeBlanc, “Pretty” Wayne Speeg, Fat Wayne, and so on. Culbert is the one that had me read Charles Murray’s Losing Ground, Oswald’s Game (which persuaded me Oswald acted alone), and others.

It’s no wonder I went on to grad school and then law school; I loved EE but was sometimes distracted or bored. (For more, see Adopting Liberty: The Stephan Kinsella Story (2025) and various biographical pieces on my site.) 1 [continue reading…]

  1. Such as Yearbook Hijinks, 1984 and 1985, “How I Became A Libertarian,” first published in LewRockwell.com (Dec. 18, 2002), also in Stephan Kinsella, Legal Foundations of a Free Society (Houston, Texas: Papinian Press, 2023); KOL455 | Haman Nature Hn 109: Philosophy, Rights, Libertarian and Legal Careers, discussing my legal career and my avocation and experience in the libertarian intellectual movement; “KOL454 | Interview with my Patent Mentor, Bill Norvell, about Patent Law and Our Days Together,” Kinsella on Liberty Podcast (March 10, 2025); “Memories of Meeting Rothbard in 1994“;  “What Sparked Your Interest in Liberty?“; “The Genesis of Estoppel: My Libertarian Rights Theory“; “My Failed Libertarian Speaking Hiatus; Memories of Mises Institute and Other Events, 1988–20192025“; “Interview by The Libertarian“; “Stephan Kinsella on the Logic of Libertarianism and Why Intellectual Property Doesn’t Exist,” an interview with Anthony Wile, originally published in The Daily Bell (March 18, 2012), also in Kinsella, Legal Foundations of a Free Society (Houston, Texas: Papinian Press, 2023); “Faculty Spotlight Interview: Stephan Kinsella”; “Libertarians & the Religious Right: an Interview with Stephan Kinsella,” interview by Alberto Mingardi, Laissez Faire City Times, v. 2.39 (1999); “On Libertarian Legal Theory, Self-Ownership and Drug Laws,” interview by Anthony Wile at The Daily Bell (July 20, 2014), also in Kinsella, Legal Foundations of a Free Society. []
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Libertarian Answer Man: On Hoppe and Natural Law

From Twitter:

Dear
@NSKinsella
, I have a question about argumentative ethics. Isn’t natural law more fundamental, since it is based on human nature, which precedes all language, and therefore much more transcendental than it? Thus being a stronger starting point.

Kinsella:

Hoppe argues persuasively in my view that natural rights have to be justified by reference to a particular aspect of our human nature, that is the activity of argumentative justification. It cannot be found in action itself, as Gewirth argues, because action itself is not normative or conative, and thus does not invoke universalizability. Our rights are based on our nature as acting beings in a world of scarcity but those who use reason and engage in peaceful, normative-laden argumentative discourse to justify norms. It cannot be based on nature alone because of the is-ought gap: you cannot go from what something is to conclude what it ought to do; this gap is logically unbridgeable; you must rest normative claims on other values, norms, which is in fact the case when one engages in peaceful, genuine argumentation. See my book, stephankinsella.com/lffs/ , ch. 6, at n.14, and ch. 22, Part II.E. See also stephankinsella.com/2010/01/intell On getting an ought from an ought, see stephankinsella.com/2006/11/omega-
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