"It might seem that consequentialism and libertarianism make strange bedfellows. But for Richard Fumerton, in this tour de force of a philosophical journey ranging from metaethics to public policy, they make a happy marriage."
— Larry Alexander, University of San Diego
“Libertarianism valorizes individual freedom, and on the traditional libertarian view, that freedom is demanded and secured by individual rights. Consequentialism is often thought to be antithetical to libertarianism precisely because it cannot accommodate such rights, instead requiring significant personal sacrifice for the greater good. In A Consequentialist Defense of Libertarianism, Richard Fumerton turns this debate on its head, advancing a consequentialist libertarianism that is more subtle than most extant rights-based versions of libertarianism and anything but doctrinaire.”
— John Oberdiek, Rutgers University
"Richard Fumerton’s A Consequentialist Defense of Libertarianism is a tour de force working through many major issues in ethics, political and legal philosophy, epistemology, and philosophy generally, done by one of the most distinguished philosophers of our times. Fumerton’s judgments on these issues are well-organized and clearly expressed in a manner accessible to lay readers, and yet despite such widespread accessibility, there is no sacrifice of the kind of philosophical sophistication achievable only by one who has spent a lifetime maturing his judgments about such issues."
— Michael S. Moore, University of Illinois
"A masterful, rich, and lucid overview of what consequentialism is and how consequentialism approaches policy questions. Taking on abortion, the legalization of recreational drugs, and taxes, Fumerton explains in compelling terms why policies that preserve and protect social and economic freedom are likely to have the best consequences for communities."
— Colleen Murphy, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign