Lexington Books
Pages: 408
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-2647-9 • Hardback • August 2008 • $162.00 • (£125.00)
978-0-7391-2648-6 • Paperback • August 2008 • $70.99 • (£55.00)
978-0-7391-3053-7 • eBook • August 2008 • $67.00 • (£52.00)
Edward W. Younkins is professor of accountancy and business administration at Wheeling Jesuit University.
1 Table of Contents
2 Preface
3 Introduction
Part 4 I. Ancient and Medieval Periods
Chapter 5 1. Lao Tzu's Naturalistic Metaphysics, Ethics, and Politics
Chapter 6 2. Aristotle and Human Flourishing
Chapter 7 3. Aristotle and Economics
Chapter 8 4. Epicurus on Freedom and Happiness
Chapter 9 5. Thomas Aquinas's Christian Aristotelianism
Part 10 II. Early Modern and Renaissance Periods
Chapter 11 6. Spinoza on Freedom, Ethics, and Politics
Chapter 12 7. John Locke's Limited State
Chapter 13 8. Turgot on Progress and Political Economy
Chapter 14 9. Adam Smith's Moral and Economic System
Part 15 III. The Late Modern Period
Chapter 16 10. Jean-Baptiste Say's Law of Markets: A Fundamental Conceptual Integration
Chapter 17 11. Herbert Spencer on Liberty and Human Progress
Chapter 18 12. Carl Menger's Economics of Well-Being
Part 19 IV. The Contemporary Period
Chapter 20 13. Ludwig von Mises on Human Action
Chapter 21 14. Ayn Rand's Philosophy of Objectivism
Chapter 22 15. Murray Rothbard's Randian Austrianism
Chapter 23 16. The Road to Objective Economics: Hayek takes a Wrong Turn
Chapter 24 17. Milton Friedman's Pragmatic and Incremental Libertarianism
Chapter 25 18. Mises, Friedman, and Rand: A Methodological Comparison
Chapter 26 19. James M. Buchanan: Constitutional and Post-Constitutional Political Economy
Chapter 27 20. Robert Nozick's Libertarian Framework for Utopia
Chapter 28 21. Reality is Not Optional: Thomas Sowell's Vision of Man and Society
Chapter 29 22. Michael Novak's Vision of Democratic Capitalism
Part 30 V. The Philosophy of Freedom: In Retrospect and Prospect
Chapter 31 23. Revisiting the Intellectual Heritage of a Free Society
Chapter 32 24. Developing a Paradigm for a Free Society
Chapter 33 Index
34 About the Author
This wonderful volume brings together some of the most important ideas that serve as capitalism's intellectual infrastructure. Now is the time to give them a hearing again! Professor Younkins has done a marvelous service in making this possible for today's students.
— Lew Rockwell, Ludwig von Mises Institute
Champions of a Free Society is a tour de force of the libertarian and classical liberal movements. Dig into any of these chapters, better yet, all of them, and see a masterfully told story of the history of liberty from days gone by to the modern era.
— Walter E. Block, Loyola University New Orleans
Ed Younkins has here created an invaluable resource for the interested layman: an eminently readable, largely non-technical survey of influential free-market thinkers. This is a masterful summary of 2,500 years of libertarian and classical liberal thought, from Lao Tzu to Aristotle to Locke to Rand, Mises, and Rothbard. Best of all, the presentation is not narrowly 'economic.' Open this book and you will open your mind to the glory of human flourishing.
— Larry J. Sechrest, Sul Ross University
Ed Younkins is once again laying the foundations for a return to limited government. He makes accessible the thoughts of the intellectual giants that we all wish we had read but never had the time to and does it in a way that is clear, concise, and informative. Buy an extra copy of this book for your children's government and history teachers.
— Gary Wolfram, Hillsdale College
Champions of a Free Society is a compelling story of the evolution and development of liberalism's foundational ideas. In effortlessly readable prose, the author capsulizes the philosophic and economic views of twenty writers on liberty. He handles with ease and understanding the most difficult concepts of metaphysics and epistemology, as well as ethics, political philosophy, and economics. An eye-opening overview concentrated in just a few hundred pages.
— Jerry Kirkpatrick, California State Polytechnic University
Younkins provides a superb complement to his earlier book, Capitalism and Commerce. He presents an encyclopedic investigation of the rich intellectual heritage of liberty. This is a thought-provoking journey through the works of great thinkers, past and present.
— Chris Matthew Sciabarra, author of Ayn Rand: The Russian Radical
Champions of a Free Society is a welcome introduction to the nature and history of the modern philosophy of liberty. It should be especially valuable to economists reconciling a preference for freedom with the 'value-free' nature of their science.
— John B. Egger, Towson University
Recommended. Two-star review.
— Choice Reviews, March 2009