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Objectivists cannot be Libertarians?

Posted by Esceptico 8 years, 9 months ago to Philosophy
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I have been told both politely and impolitely by fellow Objectivists that one cannot be both an Objectivist and a Libertarian. I have heard this even here in the Gulch. I profess to being both.

Rand went on rants, literally, against Libertarians. Do not join, she says, “‘libertarian’” hippies, who subordinate reason to whims, and substitute anarchism for capitalism.”[“Ayn Rand Letter,” Vol 1, No. 7, page 3, Jan. 3, 1972.] It does not take one deeply schooled in argument to recognize the ad hominem attacks in this one sentence, but the significant point is she set up a straw man in that Libertarians as such do not subordinate reason to whims and are not anarchists. Yes, there are some Libertarians who do and are one or both of these things, but are some Objectivists.

A Libertarian is simply a person who subscribes to the Non-Agression Principle (NAP). Nothing more, nothing less. So long as a person agreed with the NAP, one could be a communist or an anarchist. Libertarians are united only by the NAP and not by any other unifying principles or outlook on life. To be a member of the LP there is one requirement and only one: you must agree to the NAP. [https://www.lp.org/membership July 11, 2016.]

Picking up the theme from Rand, Ayn Rand Institute “Distinguished Fellow” (whatever that is) Peter Schwartz went so far as to say Objectivists should not be “trafficking with Libertarians.” [“On Moral Sanctions,” by Peter Schwartz, May 18, 1989.] This sounds similar to me to a Jehovah’s Witness, or any other cult, proclamation prohibiting contact with the outside world. And, indeed, several Objectivists have shunned me ever since I said I disagreed with them. If I had been a JW, then I would be “disestablished.” The point is the same: disagree with the dogma and you are out of the club.

During 1985 Schwartz wrote a series of articles in his “Intellectual Activist” publication. These are published, according to the introduction, in a condensed version as Chapter 31 in the book “The Voice of Reason.” Schwartz again sets up the Libertarian as a straw man and then sets about attacking the straw man. I am not going to detail his laboriously stated errors and ad hominem attacks because it is not relevant to my question below.

Apparently the subject is still something of interest to ARI. Schwartz lists, among his Talks and Lectures credits, “Analyzing Libertarianism: A Case Study in Thinking in Principles.” [https://ari.aynrand.org/experts/peter.... July 11, 2016] I could not access this, but I image it is more of the same diatribe he previously presented. I say this because as recently as July 2, 2016, [https://ari.aynrand.org/blog/2016/07/.... July 11, 2016.] ARI touted a discussion to be streamed the following day on the subject. I missed that.

Here is the problem for me. A principle of Objectivism is the NAP. Restated in the words of Rand: “… no man may initiate—do you hear me? No man may start—the use of physical force against others.”

The only principle required of Libertarians is: “To validate my membership, I certify that I oppose the initiation of force to achieve political or social goals.”

Over the decades, every time an Objectivist tells me I must choose between being an Objectivist and a Libertarian, I point out the above and ask a question. To date I have not received even the courtesy of an answer.

I ask: How are these two principles mutually exclusive?


All Comments

  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Thank you. I appreciate another viewpoint on this issue. It still beats me how much venom the word “libertarian” generates in some people. As I see it, libertarians simply agree on the NAP, and any other belief that can fit under that tent is fine. I am okay with that. Rand should be, according to her writings, but more and more I think I see the effects of cognitive dissonance in Rand and many of her apostles.
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  • Posted by $ FredTheViking 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Well, that is the major issue with Libertarians that Objectivist have to begin with. Libertarians define themselves loosely, where as Objectivist adopt Ayn's System entirely. Even among those that called themselves Objectivist that is devisions. There is those who hold Ayn Rand words as gossip (for a lack of a better word). Then there are those who have adopted the Objectivist system, but are more free thinking and more willing to work with libertarians. (Again "Free Thinking" is relative. Ayn Rand believe strongly in free thinking, but I am struggling to find better words).

    Actually, Leonard Peikoff did a podcast explaining that liberty isn't by itself a very sound basis for a moment, which the libertarians as a term is based. However, he did say that Objectivist may work with Liberation to achieve common political goals.

    The best I can do to answer your question.
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  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    To say she made a mistake is not negative. It would normally show humanity. I suspect her viewpoint was as much based upon making her several writings saying humans are born with no instincts and evolution would dispute that, thus she did not want to deal with the subject. An issue of cognative dissonance.
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  • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I didn't need all that.
    You "Imposed" since you gave a different definition of ML and are assuming she is using that def.

    She appropriately used "anti-conceptual mentality"; see also Vol !!, #16

    I won't answer again - no value; nothing here is a negative on Rand.
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  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I quoted her. In what way am I changing the defintion of her use of the term. Here is the entire paragraph:
    Complete Rand quote:

    “I am not a student of the theory of evolution and, therefore, I am neither its supporter nor its opponent. But a certain hypothesis has haunted me for years; I want to stress that it is only a hypothesis. There is an enormous breach of continuity between man and all the other living species. The difference lies in the nature of man's consciousness, in its distinctive characteristic: his conceptual faculty. It is as if, after aeons of physiological development, the evolutionary process altered its course, and the higher stages of development focused primarily on the consciousness of living species, not their bodies. But the development of a man's consciousness is volitional: no matter what the innate degree of his intelligence, he must develop it, he must learn how to use it, he must become a human being by choice. What if he does not choose to? Then he becomes a transitional phenomenon — a desperate creature that struggles frantically against his own nature, longing for the effortless “safety” of an animal's consciousness, which he cannot recapture, and rebelling against a human consciousness,
    which he is afraid to achieve.

    “For years, scientists have been looking for a "missing link" between
    man and animals. Perhaps that missing link is the anti-conceptual mentality.”

    Rand deals with the subject of evolution only in the first sentence of the first paragraph above, and then changes the subject. She comes back to the subject in the second paragraph, and here she is completely wrong. Scientists did not use the term “missing link” in 1973 (or any other time, really) and she proposes the missing link might be the anti-conceptual mentality — and the anti-conceptual mentality has absolutely nothing to do with the subject of evolution.
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  • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    You ignore the use of that ML term by Rand. It is inappropriate to impose a different definition on Rand in her conversation we discussed.

    All that is important here is that you agree with all fundamental principles/values of Rand's.
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  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I appreciate your defending Rand, but with all due respect there is no “missing link” now, there was no “missing link” in 1973, and, in fact, there has never been a “missing link.” And, I must point out, the issue is scientifically resolved.

    The missing link is a non-scientific term for any transitional fossil or species, especially the great apes (of which we are one), linking back to last common ancestor which is connected with human evolution. Scientists, however, do not use the term, as it refers to a pre-evolutionary view of nature.

    The term "missing link" refers back to the originally static pre-evolutionary concept of the great chain of being, a deist idea that all existence is linked, from the lowest dirt, through the living kingdoms to angels and finally to a god. The idea of all living things being linked through some sort of transmutation process predates Darwin’s theory of evolution

    The idea of a "missing link" between humans and so-called "lower" animals remains lodged in the public imagination and I most often hear the phrase uttered by creationists as proof their god created each species separately and independently. You can see this at the Institute for Creation Research website (https://www.icr.org)

    I am an Objectivist who does not look at Rand as one who, for all the good she has done, is inerrant.
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  • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Yes, you are very off-base here.
    Her metaphysics certainly shows she is on the side of science (vs mysticism); more importantly, on the side of nature. She had a serious question about evolution, however, due to the Missing Link that science has never resolved. She didn't take a stand because - aside from not needing to as a philosopher - there were questions within the study of evolution, not that mysticism was an alternative.

    She obviously looked at the issue; she simply could not fully resolve - as no one else has - the mystery of the Missing Link. Note, however, that she did provide a hypothetical explanation.

    Are you an Objectivist concerned that she had a flaw, or a skeptic attempting to discredit her?
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  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Read it for yourself. The exact quote is: “I am not a student of the theory of evolution and, therefore, I am neither its supporter nor its opponent.” To be “neither its supporter nor its opponent” is the definition of an agnostic. To me the most important point is, for all the other positions she took on relative trivia, she did not take a stand on evolution.

    The creation–evolution controversy involves a recurring cultural, political, and theological dispute about the origins of the earth, of humanity, and of other life. Such is hardly trivia, especially to a person claiming to be a philosopher, and she did not even look at the issue. The most cursory examination, even in 1973, would have shown overwhelming evidence for evolution and none, zero, for creationism (the alternative). Rand, the atheist, was unwilling to commit to science in the face of mysticism.

    Did I misrepresent her view?
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  • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    You are misrepresenting her view.
    She was referring to the 'missing link" between man and animal, and simply questions how evolution could leave such a drastic distinction.
    She did not "refuse" to take a stand; she simply did not fully study evolution as it was not a philosophical issue. Science has not fully "figured it out", and she certainly would not have been in a position to do so.
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  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I really don’t have the ability to be more clear. The one and the only principle uniting libertarians is the NAP. Therefore, all sorts of other opinions, beliefs, whatever you wish to term them, are possible. One cannot expand the one and only principle to encompass other political positions --- except when those other political positions conflict with the NAP. Certainly building a fence around your own home does not violate the NAP and there will be people on both sides of the issue as to whether you should do it.
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  • Posted by 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    If she did figure out evolution, as late as 1973 in the Ayn Rand Letter she refused to take a stand---as to this issue she was an agnostic. Vol II, No. 17, page 5.
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  • Posted by tdechaine 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    If you are implying she did not "figure it out", you are certainly mistaken; and my previous response was intended to show that.
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  • Posted by $ MichaelAarethun 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Like 1766 to 1776?

    2. NAP wouldn't apply to Russia at that time in history The other cheek had already been turned. Where it runs into trouble is being told we should do 'someting' about 'some' situation only to find out the next quote is 'what gives you the right to....." Usually form the left. Usually for cheap political gain..."

    My answer is 'you did.' You could have done something but couldn't wouldn't didn't and won't I can do something and have the 'will' to act and the moral fiber to act correctly. You do not. But next time I'll let you go first. What game me the right? Common Politeness.
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  • Posted by $ sjatkins 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    There is no frozen LP position on national borders. Could you say more what differences you are referring to?
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  • Posted by $ sjatkins 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    It is not possible to fully understand the nature of human beings without understanding their evolutionary heritage.
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  • Posted by $ sjatkins 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    You state I am misrepresenting Objectivist views but you do not show it.
    I support the Libertarian Party as being the only current on the ballot in all states political party that comes close to rational political views.
    What ARI calls "fundamentals" and what I believe from my own deep reading and study are truly the "fundamentals" are not the same thing. As an Objectivist I must go with what I understand to be the core not with what some group claims is such.
    I would agree that a true Objectivist is not rationalistic. Which is why I have my doubts with ARI as I believe that they sometimes are.
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  • Posted by Watcher55 8 years, 9 months ago
    I wouldn't say that Objectivists can't be Libertarians. After all, significant elements of political philosophy overlap, notably the "no initiation of physical force".

    However for the many reasons "mainstream" Objectivists tend to be dismissive of the Libertarian Party (what we could call capital-L Libertarians), it might not do them any good. That is, I suspect that if the Libertarian Party ever achieved power, its Objectivist wing would do as well as the moderate branches of the Russian Revolution did after the revolution. Or even the slightly less vicious branches (Trotsky, please call your office). The Libertarian Party is rather a philosophical mess, and the one thing power is good at (yes, Virginia, even if the Libertarians had it) is selecting for the most vicious.

    Sure, it is hard to imagine the Libertarian Party being truly equivalent to the Communists; but I think the same principle would apply on a lesser scale.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I enjoyed Matt Welch and Nick Gillespie when they were at Reason Magazine. While on the john yesterday morning, I read an interview in their magazine with a "Marxist libertarian". Wondering what on earth that could be, I almost used it as toilet paper.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Well, if we do take over parts of Venezuela, then I have know some fellow FIT alumni who can help us pull that off.
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  • Posted by $ CBJ 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    RE: “without philosophy, how can one go from the non-initiation-of-force principle to a platform?” Basically, we just say “This is a principle we subscribe to, and the LP platform is based on this principle.” There can be multiple underlying philosophies that lead to this principle. The content of the platform follows from the principle itself, not the means of deriving it. Of course there may be “vast differences of opinion” within the party, but that is true of any other political party as well. The purpose of any political party is (or should be) to achieve its goals in the political arena, not to settle philosophical differences.
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  • Posted by rbroberg 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    "Libertarianism is a political movement, not an overall philosophy. Ayn Rand’s formulation covers more ground because Objectivism is an overall philosophy." True.

    "The non-aggression principle (or non-initiation-of-force principle) is all that libertarians really have in common." The trouble I have with the statement is that the LP platform is based on a political movement, not a philosophy, and therefore it does not define it philosophically - which is to say "why is the initiation of force evil"?

    That is to say, without philosophy, how can one go from the non-initiation-of-force principle to a platform? Of course, the platforms of two LP members may be different from another, but then the question remains: what makes it a political party? It must be a loose collection of similar beliefs. The loose collection of similar beliefs may be correct beliefs but the lack of philosophic answers makes the movement susceptible to vast differences of opinion. It is a collection of opinions, not a structure of facts.

    John Stossel hosted a Libertarian from the CATO institute who supported Bernie Sanders and claimed that even Hayek found it necessary to provide a safety net to the poor and disenfranchised. That kind of comment represents an alien or sometimes even repulsive set of values to other Libertarians. How much more so for those who hold the initiation of force as the evil? How much more so for Objectivists?
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  • Posted by Temlakos 8 years, 9 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Here's the problem. How do you define the initiation of force? An Objectivist--or to be more specific, Rand--defines "initiation" to mean first use against anyone. A libertarian, the way I see the "Non-aggression Principle" applied, defines "to initiate" as strictly "against the one contemplating retaliation." In other words, a libertarian does not respect the use of force in the long-term defense of others. A libertarian respects the use of force only in immediate self-defense.

    With the result that a libertarian would wait until we get a launch detection before even building a missile.
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