by Stephan Kinsella
on February 21, 2026
As mentioned in Robert Pascal, R.I.P., after law school I became friends with retired Professor Emeritus Robert Pascal, a famous law professor at LSU that I never met until after I graduated (likewise, I also became friends and correspondent with LSU Law professor Saúl Litvinoff after graduation). We had a good deal of correspondence in the 1990s and even after, when I was an attorney in Houston and then Philadelphia, and would meet on occasion at his home in Baton Rouge when I would return home for visits. He passed away in 2018 at the age of 102.
Much of his correspondence with me was elegantly hand-written. It spanned from 1993 to 2011, and I have at least 75 pages worth. I may post it some day after reviewing it more closely, even though some of my youthful enthusiasm and desperation to find anyone intelligent to converse with is a bit embarrassing now (this was before the Internet starting making it easier to discourse with remote people in our Phyles).
But as I mention him in Herman, The Louisiana Civil Code: A European Legacy for the United States, I’ll post below some selected text from two of our interchanges in 1993–1994, concerning, in part, the “Tournament of Scholars” between Pascal and Batiza. As was clear in our first discussion, Pascal was a leftist and what he called a “catholic communist,” small-c catholic, he emphasized. But he was smart and courtly and decent and I really liked and admired him. [continue reading…]
{ }
by Stephan Kinsella
on February 21, 2026
Thanks, Grok!
Prompts include:
“The Renaissance emphasized a “rebirth” (from the French word renaître, meaning to be born again) of classical Greek and Roman knowledge, arts, and culture.” Why was it dormant or lost?
list the top 10 enlightenment figures, and the top 10 classical liberal figures, and show overlap.
what is the difference between the renaissance and enlightment. explain their significance and relation to classical liberalism
now combine all your previous answers into one final unified overall report. And include in this an analysis of the question of whether libertarianism is of the left, or of the right, and trace its progenitors, influences, and origins. Consult also the attached
[continue reading…]
{ }
by Stephan Kinsella
on February 21, 2026
Related:
- “All that is not permitted is forbidden”
- Robert Pascal, R.I.P.
- The Louisiana Civil Code of 1825: Content, Influences and Languages; Past and Future: Returning to my Louisiana Roots
- On the Role of Commentators and Codes and the Oracles of the Law
- Examples of Libertarian Law vs. Louisiana vs. French vs. Common Law: Consideration and Formalities
- Roman Law and Hypothetical Cases
- Watson, The Importance of “Nutshells”
- “Legislation and the Discovery of Law in a Free Society,” in Legal Foundations of a Free Society (Houston: Papinian Press, 2023) [LFFS]
- KOL020 | “Libertarian Legal Theory: Property, Conflict, and Society: Lecture 3: Applications I: Legal Systems, Contract, Fraud” (Mises Academy, 2011)
- Legislative Positivism and Rationalism in the Louisiana and French Civil Codes
- Logical and Legal Positivism
- Reading Suggestions for Prospective/New Law Students (Roman/Civil law focus)
- The Greatest Libertarian Books
In my libertarian and law school studies I was fascinated with law and legal history, reading books and articles touching on both topics, e.g. Bruce Benson’s The Enterprise of Law, Bruno Leoni’s Freedom and the Law, and so on. As an aspiring legal scholar and lawyer, and Louisiana-educated “civilian” lawyer, I was also interested not only in the common law but the Roman and European civil law, and in law reviews in general. Even footnotes. I also became interested in international law when pursuing an LL.M. in international law at King’s College London, and ended up publishing a lot in this area and melding it with my libertarian-related theorizing. [continue reading…]
{ }
by Stephan Kinsella
on February 21, 2026
Related:
In my libertarian and law school studies I was fascinated with law and legal history, reading books and articles touching on both topics, e.g. Bruce Benson’s The Enterprise of Law, Bruno Leoni’s Freedom and the Law, and so on. As an aspiring legal scholar and lawyer, and Louisiana-educated “civilian” lawyer, I was also interested not only in the common law but the Roman and European civil law, and in law reviews in general. Even footnotes. I also became interested in international law when pursuing an LL.M. in international law at King’s College London, and ended up publishing a lot in this area and melding it with my libertarian-related theorizing. [continue reading…]
{ }
by Stephan Kinsella
on February 20, 2026
Related:
My estoppel theory of libertarian rights is illustrated graphically in the chart/poster below, prepared by Thiago @thiagovscoelho.
[continue reading…]
{ }
by Stephan Kinsella
on February 19, 2026
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast: Episode 482.
Audio version of “A Tour Through Walter Block’s Oeuvre,” in Walter Block – Anarcho-Capitalist Austro-Libertarian, Elvira Nica & Gheorghe H. Popescu, eds. (Addleton Academic Publishers, 2025). Thanks to George Besada.
Podcast (kinsella-on-liberty): Play in new window | Download (39.4MB)
{ }
by Stephan Kinsella
on February 16, 2026
I recently added the text of this old chapter of mine to the post below on my legal blog. It was Appendix I to a book I co-authored with a colleague, but of course I wrote that appendix.
By Stephan Kinsella, KinsellaLaw.com (Dec. 10, 2004):
Recently found this oldie but goodie: my “Economic Calculation Under Socialism,” Appendix I to Protecting Foreign Investment Under International Law: Legal Aspects of Political Risk (Dobbs Ferry, New York: Oceana Publications, 1997). Text below. It was not included in the successor treatise, Noah D. Rubins, Thomas N. Papanastasiou and N. Stephan Kinsella, International Investment, Political Risk, and Dispute Resolution: A Practitioner’s Guide, 2d ed. (Oxford University Press, 2020), as my co-authors there were less libertarian than me… [continue reading…]
{ }
by Stephan Kinsella
on February 14, 2026
Related:
- The problem of particularistic ethics or, why everyone really has to admit the validity of the universalizability principle
- Kinsella, “Argumentation Ethics and Liberty: A Concise Guide,” Mises Daily (May 27, 2011)
- Kinsella, “Dialogical Arguments for Libertarian Rights” and “Defending Argumentation Ethics: Reply to Murphy & Callahan,” both in Legal Foundations of a Free Society (Houston, Texas: Papinian Press, 2023)
- Hans-Hermann Hoppe, A Theory of Socialism and Capitalism (Laissez Faire Books, 2013), ch. 7
- idem, The Economics and Ethics of Private Property (Auburn, Ala.: Mises Institute, 2006), chs. 11, 13
I came across an interesting reference in Alessandro Fusillo, “Rothbard, Philosopher of Law,” in Rothbard at 100: A Tribute and Assessment, Stephan Kinsella and Hans-Hermann Hoppe, eds. (forthcoming 2026):
According to Giovanni Birindelli, the universalization test is the only criterion to distinguish arbitrary rules from an objectively founded legal system. He argues that the only rule that passes the test is the non-aggression principle which justifies coercion (self-defense) as a means to uphold self-ownership. Giovanni Birindelli, “L’etica dell’uguaglianza davanti alla legge” (“The ethics of equality before the law“), Giovanni’s Substack (Nov. 5, 2023).
Google’s English translation is below. [continue reading…]
{ }
by Stephan Kinsella
on February 12, 2026
Related
- KOL234 | Vin Armani Show: Live from London: Kinsella vs. Craig Wright Debate on Intellectual Property
- KOL267 | Sal the Agorist Interview: Bitcoin, Copyright, Craig Wright
- IP is Not “Not Property”
- Libertarian and Lockean Creationism: Creation As a Source of Wealth, not Property Rights; Hayek’s “Fund of Experience”; the Distinction Between Scarce Means and Knowledge as Guides to Action
- KOL274 | Nobody Owns Bitcoin (PFS 2019)
- Joshua Fairfield, “Property as the law of virtual things,” Front Res Metr Anal. (2022 Aug 26)
- Fairfield, Tokenized: The law of non-fungible tokens and unique digital property, Ind. LJ 97, 1261 (2022)
- “Dr” [sic] Craig S Wright, “Blockchain and Digital Assets: A New Paradigm for Copyright and Patent Distribution through Micropayments” (29 Nov 2023)
- Ana Mercedes López Rodríguez, “Law Applicable to Virtual Real Estate in the Metaverse Proceedings of the International Congress Towards a Responsible Development of the Metaverse,” June 2024
A new article is out from Craig “Satoshi” Wright, “You Don’t Own Your Digital Stuff. NFTs Could Actually Fix That — Without Intellectual Property.“, Craig’s Substack (Feb 10, 2026). Subtitled: “Why the “right-click save” crowd and the IP maximalists are both wrong, and how a 150-year-old economic tradition explains what digital ownership really means.”
I mentioned this in a tweet:
Craig Wright
[continue reading…]
{ }
by Stephan Kinsella
on February 11, 2026
Related
I remember seeing a poster from a few years ago showing all the things smart phones replaced—pagers, dictaphones, address book, alarms, timers, music, podcasts, audiobooks, levels, cameras, dictionary, translation, maps, computers, compasses, GPS, flashlights, and so on. I asked Grok and ChatGPT to do the same for AI. See posters and lists below. Of course AI is being gimped and hampered by IP, and some of the things it will do are only necessary because of IP—for example generating new music or book covers or illustrations with AI because using existing music or images might infringe copyright.
See 24 things that the mobile phone has replaced; 30 Things Your Smartphone Has Replaced; 24 things made obsolete by smartphones.
[continue reading…]
{ }
by Stephan Kinsella
on February 8, 2026
Adapted from an forthcoming article by Hans-Hermann Hoppe:
… concerning [Javier] Milei and the (non-)closure of Argentina’s central bank” … He has also introduced some economic “free market” reforms in Argentina that have been inspired by “Austrians.” But he has done nothing truly radical, deserving the praise of any anarcho-capitalist. He has not closed the central bank, as originally promised, and there are no signs that this will happen any time soon. He has brought consumer price inflation down from 300% to some 30% (wow!), but the money supply (of all monetary aggregates) has continued to grow rapidly (even more so than under several of his predecessors). He has centralized rather than decentralized government power and is on record as being fundamentally opposed to secession. In addition to assuming (rather than repudiating, as Rothbard would have recommended; see below) the existing government debt owed to the IMF of some 40 billion USD, he burdened the Argentinian people with another 42 billion USD of debt, solicited from the IMF, the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank, and in order to avoid insolvency right before the Argentinian mid-term election, in October 2025, he further required a rescue package of some 20 billion USD from “his dear friend” Donald Trump. [continue reading…]
{ }
Recent Comments