Herbert Spencer, 'the Most Misunderstood Libertarian'
A new book examines the life and ideas of the proto-libertarian philosopher.

Writing at the Library of Law & Liberty, Alberto Mingardi reviews the new book Herbert Spencer: Legacies, an academic volume featuring a series of essays on the life, ideas, and impact of the proto-libertarian philosopher and social theorist. "A towering figure in Victorian Britain," Mingardi notes, "Spencer was all but forgotten after his death. His works, which taken together form a 'Synthetic Philosophy,' seemed alien to 20th century academics in an age of meticulous specialization. Also his commitment to individual liberty and (seriously) limited government has not been too common in the discipline that he helped establish, sociology." I haven't had a chance to examine the book yet for myself, but Mingardi's mostly positive review certainly makes it sound promising. Here's a snippet:
One of the many take-aways of this book is that Spencer was a far more complex thinker than those who only know him as a diabolical "social Darwinist." Its essays might, for example, open the eyes of those who still have in mind the Herbert Spencer largely manufactured in the 1940s by Richard Hofstadter in a book that made history as a beautifully written and yet quite misleading tirade….
If I had any quibble about this impressive collection, it would be that the propensity to consider The Man Versus the State as "just" a political pamphlet causes the contributors to overlook that this is perhaps the first work whose arguments are truly centered around the notion of unintended consequences. All in all, though, Herbert Spencer: Legacies may foster a better understanding of this seminal thinker and raise yet more interest in his underappreciated writings.
Read the entire review here.
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History's first neckbeard?
No, Hugh. Those are awesome muttonchops.
That antisocial nerd Henry David Thoreau, on the other hand...
Not a good look
I thought the "most misunderstood libertarian" was Michael Hihn, because nobody knows what the fuck he's talking about half the time.
I thought it was DONDEERRRRROOOOOOOOOOOOO.
~Half the time?
how about "ever"?
Michael Hihn, the great usurper who took Herbert Spencer's legacy and ran it into the ground.
No wonder most libertarians won't self-identity as libertarian. Amirite?
Hihn is basically a warning to us all: When you hit seventy and senility, stay the fuck away from internet forums. Otherwise you might end up doing crazy bullshit like accusing other people of ruining the label 'libertarian' while actively ruining it by being a mentally imbalanced screaming jackass. Hihn has become the monster he fears, and does not realize it. A fate worse than death.
Liberty Fund has some nice hardcovers, check out The Principles of Ethics. A few years ago, I looked for, but haven't found Social Statics there.
An online version exists: http://oll.libertyfund.org/tit.....atics-1851
Well I doubt anyone who sees Spencer as the social Darwinist that Hofstadter described is going to pick up an $80 book of essays about the man, but it's good to see. Spencer is one of my favorite writers (The Man Versus The State is not "just" anything!), and I'm hoping I can find a copy at a library soon.
There's a relatively affordable hardcover edition of it, from Liberty Fund. Check the online version: http://oll.libertyfund.org/titles/330
Err... I have LF's paperback version, but I'm referring to the Herbert Spencer: Legacies book that Root is bringing to our attention.