Difference between Libertarian and Objectivist?
Posted by JoshA95 12 years, 2 months ago to Philosophy
What is the difference (if any) between Libertarians and Objectivists besides that one is a political party and the other is not? I've been wondering this for a while.
Previous comments... You are currently on page 8.
From Merriam-Webster: Aggression: angry or violent behavior or feelings
Couldn't one libel or slander another without anger, violent behavior or feelings?
I never said Objectivists agree on every issue, only on key issues.
I never said everyone other than Objectivists are altruistic. I only gave two possible examples. I won't waste everyone's time by listing all possible permutations of a Libertarian's belief. I expected the reader to think beyond the perceptual demonstration I gave.
As for a belief in a system approaching anarchy, are you really going to pretend that there are no libertarians who don't believe that? Or perhaps you've never met one, if so, visit the Adam versus the man web site and see for yourself.
As for EVERYONE else basing their ethics on altruism and ONLY Objectivists on egoism, and the faithful approaching anarchy for politics is just your opinion. And opinions are like a$$holes, we all have them and most of them stink.
If I were to use my physical capability, say chop some firewood, does that prevent my neighbor from doing the same? Does the fact that one or the other of us performed the activity at a different time matter? And should the two of us choose to sell the fruits of our labor, do either of us have the right to prevent the other from benefiting from their labor? I think that you would agree that the answer is no. So why would the output of the mind be any different?
The issue is in demonstrating that the output is truly one's own and not just mooched from another. I don't have the solution, but this would seem to be the problem to be addressed.
Just my humble opinion.
I like Ted Cruz (and Rand Paul) and I think that he is as you say - focused on the economic issues (which history has shown to be the most important issue in any election). Politically, I think it's a diversion to meander off into abortion, gay marriage, etc. when the meat and potatoes of the elections for the past 10 years have centered on the economy and loss of liberty as you point out.
Metaphysics: Objective Reality
Epistemology: Reason
Ethics: Egoism
Politics: Laissez Faire Capitalism
Libertarians disagree on the first three branches, and really the fourth one as well. If you ask a Libertarian what he believes you'll likely hear different answers.
For example one religious libertarian might say:
Metaphysics: non-objective
Epistemology: faith
Ethics: altruism
Politics: Limited government (approaching anarchy)
Another non-religious one might say:
Metaphysics: objective reality
Epistemology: reason
Ethics: altruism
Politics: Mixed system of statism and Capitalism
So where the objectivists clearly define and demonstrate their philosophical system, the libertarians as a group are a hodgepodge of beliefs that share a similar belief that the government should be limited. Limited to what? They disagree on this matter.
Objectivists are wary of Conservatives. They are convinced a Conservative will always support legislating social/moral issues and patriotism. Sometimes they are right in this. How about the flag burning legislation? Where you would have all Libertarians very upset over the NSA spying-I watched Fox News in disbelief -many commentators who are Conservative came out in support NSA over-reach and see Snowden as a traitor.
Personally, I do not see a Conservative candidate as a threat, unless they prove they are hung up on social/moral/tradtional family values to the disregard of personal freedoms. I saw both Santorum and Bachmann fall into those traps during the last election, whereas a Cruz stays very focused on fiscal and loss of liberty issues.
That's another difference between Objectivists and libertarians. Many libertarians fail to recognize any such thing as "intellectual property," in the belief that, because "all information wants to be free," all intellectual products ought to be held in common. Benjamin Franklin was one such. Were he alive today, he would head the Free Hardware Foundation, to go along with Richard Stallings' Free Software Foundation. It would be left to Thomas Alva Edison to demonstrate the value of the patent system. He, more than any other inventor, used his fees from the sale of some inventions to finance his research on others that were fundamentally transformative.
On the other hand, libertarianism is a political philosophy that has it's roots in classical Liberalism, which once meant liberty. It is different from anarchy in that libertarians do accept some limited form of government, whereas anarchists believe in no governmental structure. Typically, Conservatives are thought to believe in economic freedom and social control, and Liberals are thought to believe in social freedom and economic control, whereas libertarians believe mostly in both economic and social freedom.
Many libertarians in the US consider themselves Constitutional libertarians (myself included) which would return the federal government to the original constitutional form, removing most of the bureaucracy including most of the cabinet positions and departments and reducing the role of the federal government to security and a federal legal system and little else. This is similar to the position that many Objectivists would espouse.
Perhaps the biggest difference is that Objectivists base their philosophy on a foundation of reason that they say does not permit the existence of a deity. Those that support libertarianism do not have this position, and in fact, many believe that a supreme deity inspired the libertarian tradition of the original constitution.
Hope this helps.
But also: libertarians do not take a uniform position on government. The rational anarchists are still with us. So are those who would set limits on government--and I don't think they all agree on *what* limits. An Objectivist sets a definite limit: a government exists to manage the retaliatory use of force, and bring the same under objective control. So a government needs those institutions, and only those institutions, important to the management of force. They are:
Police
Armed services
Courts of law
Much of what the executive "regulates" today, one would litigate in an Objectivist system. An Objectivist would not think it proper to combine, in one agency, the functions of a legislature (in the making of regulations), the executive (in their enforcement), and the judiciary ("administrative law judges," etc.) Regulatory agencies are quasi-legislative and quasi-judicial in character. Instead, let the legislature make such civil laws, and grant such standing, as they shall think proper after public debate. Then let anyone with proper standing seek redress in a true court.
Load more comments...