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Also known as libertarian
filosofía política que defiende la libertad individual como principio fundamental
Libertarianism is a political philosophy that prioritizes personal freedom and liberty, based on the idea that individuals should be free to live as they choose. It matters because libertarians believe people have rights that shouldn't be violated through force or fraud, which shapes how they think government and society should be organized.
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Myth and Truth About Libertarianism | Mises Institute
Here are six common myths often heard about libertarianism.
mises.org →Get Your July Rothbard Giveaway Book! The Origins of the Federal Reserve [This essay is based on a paper presented at the April 1979 national meeting of the Philadelphia Society in Chicago. The theme of the meeting was “Conservatism and Libertarianism.”] Myth 1: Libertarians believe that each individual is an isolated, hermetically sealed atom, acting in a vacuum without influencing each other. The only possible exception is the fanatical Max Stirner, a mid-19th-century German individualist who, however, has had minimal influence upon libertarianism in his time and since. Moreover, Stirner’s explicit “might makes right” philosophy and his repudiation of all moral principles including individual rights as “spooks in the head,” scarcely qualifies him as a libertarian in any sense. Apart from Stirner, however, there is no body of opinion even remotely resembling this common indictment. Libertarians are methodological and political individualists, to be sure. They believe that only individuals think, value, act, and choose. They believe that each individual has the right to own his own body, free of coercive interference. But no individualist denies that people are influencing each other all the time in their goals, values, pursuits, and occupations. As F.A. Hayek pointed out in his notable article, “The Non Sequitur of the ‘Dependence Effect,’” John Kenneth Galbraith’s assault upon free-market economics in his best-selling The Affluent Society rested on this proposition: economics assumes that every individual arrives at his scale of values totally on his own, without being subject to influence by anyone else. On the contrary, as Hayek replied, everyone knows that most people do not originate their own values, but are influenced to adopt them by other people.1 No individualist or libertarian denies that people influence each other all the time, and surely there is nothing wrong with this inevitable process. What libertarians are opposed to is not voluntary persuasion, but the coercive imposition of values by the use of force and police power. Libertarians are in no way opposed to the voluntary cooperation and collaboration between individuals: only to the compulsory pseudo-”cooperation” imposed by the state. Myth 2: Libertarians are libertines: they are hedonists who hanker after “alternative lifestyles.” This myth has recently been propounded by Irving Kristol, who identifies the libertarian ethic with the “hedonistic” and asserts that libertarians “worship the Sears Roebuck catalogue and all the ‘alternative life styles’ that capitalist affluence permits the individual to choose from.”2 It should not be surprising, therefore, that there are libertarians who are indeed hedonists and devotees of alternative lifestyles, and that there are also libertarians who are firm adherents of “bourgeois” conventional or religious morality. There are libertarian libertines and there are libertarians who cleave firmly to the disciplines of natural or religious law. There are other libertarians who have no moral theory at all apart from the imperative of non-violation of rights. That is because libertarianism per se has no general or personal moral theory. Libertarianism does not offer a way of life; it offers liberty, so that each person is free to adopt and act upon his own values and moral principles. Libertarians agree with Lord Acton that “liberty is the highest political end” — not necessarily the highest end on everyone’s personal scale of values. There is no question about the fact, however, that the subset of libertarians who are free-market economists tends to be delighted when the free market leads to a wider range of choices for consumers, and thereby raises their standard of living. Unquestionably, the idea that prosperity is better than grinding poverty is a moral proposition, and it ventures into the realm of general moral theory, but it is still not a proposition for which I should wish to apologize. This myth is of
El libertarismo (del inglés: libertarianism, este a su vez del latín: libertas, "libertad") es una filosofía política y legal que defiende la libertad del individuo en sociedad, los derechos de propiedad privada y la asignación de los recursos a través de la economía de mercado (capitalismo de libre mercado). El libertarismo considera la propiedad y los mercados libres como las bases más sólidas para garantizar la libertad individual. Los libertarios son escépticos a la idea de que la sociedad obtiene más beneficios que perjuicios del Estado (al que identifican con la burocracia y el poder político) y frecuentemente proponen su limitación, e inclusive su eliminación. Los libertarios sostienen que la ley debe fundamentarse en la protección de los derechos individuales (o libertad negativa o no-invasión) en ocasiones son notorios en la opinión pública por promover la eliminación o la reducción de impuestos y regulaciones, y una reversión importante del Estado de bienestar moderno. Para los libertarios los vínculos políticos y jurídicos deben ser producto de acuerdos voluntarios y la fuerza solo puede emplearse legítimamente contra otros de manera defensiva o ante el incumplimiento de un acuerdo, a esta idea la llaman el principio de no agresión y es uno de los conceptos fundamentales de esta filosofía política. En las ciencias políticas el pensamiento libertario puede ser visto como heredero de algunas ideas de las tradiciones intelectuales del liberalismo clásico en mayor medida y del anarquismo filosófico en menor medida, y señalan su origen en el mundo anglosajón, especialmente en los Estados Unidos de mediados del siglo XX, desde donde se ha expandido por distintos países en las siguientes décadas. Si bien los libertarios se fundamentan en principios filosóficos bastante similares y comparten ideas como la defensa del derecho de propiedad, la libre asociación, la desregulación del comercio interno y externo, la privatización de gran parte de los servicios estatales, y el rechazo a la intervención del Estado en los acuerdos privados, existen diferencias de pensamiento entre libertarios sobre el alcance de esos principios. Uno de los debates más conocidos, aunque no el único, trata sobre el grado de antiestatismo a aplicar y se da entre los defensores del anarcocapitalismo y del minarquismo laissez faire.
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