[from
www.voluntaryist.com/fundamentals/vol_spirit.php]
The Voluntaryist Spirit
By Carl Watner
[Author's Introduction of February 2004: This hitherto unpublished
essay was first written in June 1983, and then revised in August of
that same year. It sat for two decades (receiving only limited private
circulation) until it was read by Peter Ragnar of Avalon Mint and
Roaring Lion Press. At Peter's request it was re-edited with a view to
posting on the world wide web. The author wishes to thank Alan Koontz
(editing of 1983) and Julie Watner (editing of 2004) for their timely
assistance in commenting on this essay.]
Voluntaryism is a dual doctrine, having both a positive and a
negative side. As a brand of anarchism it is the doctrine that all
coercive government (what most people would refer to as "the State")
should be voluntarily abandoned; that all invasions of individual
self-ownership rights should cease. This is its negative side. Its
positive side is that all the affairs of people should be conducted on
a voluntary basis. It does not argue for the specific form that
voluntary arrangements will take; only that the sovereignty of the
individual must remain intact, except where the individual coerced has
already aggressed upon the sovereignty of another non-aggressive
individual.
To voluntaryists, this dual doctrine represents a means, an end, and
an insight. The end, predicated upon a theory of self-ownership and
just property titles, is a peaceful anarchy, an all voluntary society.
All the affairs of people, both public and private, should be carried
out by individuals or their voluntary associations. The means to reach
such an end-state must be consistent with the goal sought. As shall be
demonstrated, it is in fact the means that determine the end. So only
voluntary methods of persuasion, education, and nonviolent resistance
to State criminality may be used to bring about voluntaryist goals.
People cannot be coerced into freedom. Finally, voluntaryism is a
realization about the nature of political society, viz., that all
States are grounded upon general popular acceptance and require the
cooperation of their victims.
These three aspects of voluntaryism mutually reinforce each other.
The very goal of an all-voluntary society suggests its own means. The
attempt to use governmental or political processes to reform or abolish
the evils of coercion is not a voluntaryist means because it rests on
coercion. The distinguishing marks of voluntaryism -- that it is at
once both nonviolent and non-electoral in its efforts to convince
people to voluntarily abandon the State -- set it apart from all other
methods of social change. The voluntaryist insight into the nature of
political power does not permit people to violently overthrow their
government or even use the electoral process to change it, but rather
points out that if they shall withdraw their cooperation from the
system, it will no longer be able to function or enforce its will.
The voluntaryist spirit is thus an attitude of mind or a sense of
life, if you will, which animates those engaged in the struggle for the
recognition of self-ownership rights and the demise of the State. It is
the passionate disinterested love of justice for its own sake,
regardless of the consequences which the struggle brings to one
personally. It is a knowledge that if one takes care of the means that
the end will take care of itself. It is an understanding that the
morality and principles of voluntary interaction with other self-owners
is the only practical manner of living life upon this earth. It is an
epistemological rejection of violence, a knowledge that coercion can
never rationally convince. Come what will, wherever the chips may fall,
voluntaryism seeks the perfect way but it differs from other
philosophies of life in seeking it with utter disinterestedness. Right
means are an end in themselves, their own reward.
There is a great deal of affinity between what has been called "the
aristocratic spirit" and the voluntaryist spirit. Writing in the March
1920 issue of The North American Review, Hanford Henderson
defined the former "as the love of excellence for its own sake, or even
more simply as the disinterested passionate love of excellence. The
aristocrat, to deserve the name, must love excellence everywhere and in
everything." Continuing on, Henderson wrote:
He must love it in himself, in his own beautiful body, in
his own alert mind, in his own illuminated spirit and he must love it
in others; must love it in all human relations and occupations and
activities, in all things in earth or sea or sky. And this love must be
so passionate that he strives in all things to attain excellence, and
so tireless that in the end he arrives. But not even the hope of Heaven
may lure him. He must love and work disinterestedly, without the least
thought of reward, enamored only of the transcendent beauty of
excellence, and quite unregardful of himself.
Both the aristocratic spirit and the voluntaryist spirit demand the
highest effort of the individual. It is a contradiction to say that
aristocracy or voluntaryism asks for privilege, which can only be
upheld by violence. Coercive grants of power are contrary both to the
doctrine of perfection and voluntary means. What the aristocrat and the
voluntaryist want is that people come to share their attitudes toward
life. Neither "may accept nothing which others may not have upon
precisely the same terms, and the terms are unremitting, passionate
effort. ... It is not a matter of birth, or occupation, or education.
It is an attitude of mind carried into daily action. ..."
Terence MacSwiney, an early 20th Century Hibernian patriot, referred
to the voluntaryist spirit as "a moral force", "that great virtue of
mind and heart that keeps a man unconquerable above every power of
brute strength." "A man of moral force is he who, seeing a thing to be
right and essential and claiming his allegiance, stands for it as for
the truth, unheeding of any consequence. It is not that he is a wild
person, utterly reckless of all mad possibilities . . . and indifferent
to any havoc that may ensue. No, but it is a first principle of his,
that a true thing is a good thing, and from a good thing rightly
pursued can follow no bad consequence. And he faces every possible
development with conscience at rest -- it may be with trepidation for
his own courage in some great ordeal, but for the nobility of the cause
and the beauty of the result that must ensue, always with serene faith."
Although neither Henderson nor MacSwiney would have considered
themselves anarchists, they did realize that this mind cast made for a
laissez-faire attitude, particularly in such fields of endeavor as
education and industry. The aristocratic spirit seeks excellence in
variety and resists the tendencies towards enforced uniformity in all
areas of life. It looks for a multiform and varied excellence. "The
aristocratic world is not one of dead levels, but a world of varied
interests and constant promise and unfaltering progress. It is, in a
word, the world of evolution." In fact, it is only in a voluntaryist
setting that the aristocratic spirit can truly operate. The attempt to
coerce must inevitably vitiate such a spirit. For as Henderson
concludes, the teaching that the end justifies the means is not at all
in harmony with the aristocratic spirit. "The whole event must be
excellent, the means as well as the end. ... It is only in the
disinterested quest of excellence that anything notable can be
accomplished. ... Disinterestedness is the essential condition of
success."
MacSwiney, too, understood the importance of means and ends in the
Irish struggle against England. "A fight that is not clean-handed will
make victory more disgraceful than any defeat." He maintained that
Ireland could not win her independence by "base methods" and that no
physical victory could compensate for a spiritual defeat. He also noted
that every sphere of a man's life is interconnected with the rest.
Therefore he claimed that the secret of strength was the development of
individual character in every activity of life. In an interesting
comment on means and ends, he noted that "the middle of the day has a
natural connection with the beginning of the day and the end of the
day, and in whatever sphere a man finds himself, his acts must be in
relation to and consistent with every other sphere. ... One cannot be
an honest man in one sphere and a rascal in another. ... Everything
that crosses a man's path in his day's round of little or great moment
requires of him an attitude towards it, and the conscious or
unconscious shaping of his attitude is determining how he will proceed
in other spheres not in view."
Voluntaryism relies heavily on the means-end insight to justify its
own position. Indeed, without any formal guidelines as to the shape
that an all-voluntary society will take, voluntaryism necessarily
concentrates exclusively on the means. Voluntaryism is means-oriented,
not goal-oriented because all it objects to is the initiation of
coercion against the non-invasive person. So long as the means are
peaceful, respectful of self-ownership and property titles, the ends
cannot be criticized from the voluntaryist perspective. This is not to
imply that the only standard of judging human behavior is whether or
not it is voluntary. Certainly some behavior may be irrational,
vicious, immoral, religious, irreligious, (etc., etc.) but the first
question the voluntaryist asks is: "Is it truly voluntary?" The
voluntaryist spirit attacks the State on precisely this basis: although
certain government goods or services may be essential, it is not
essential that they be provided by government. Whether we object to
what governments do (i. e., the provision of whatever product or public
service, whether it be public schools, the post office, etc.) is beside
the point. Voluntaryists oppose the State because it relies on force
for its very existence. We oppose the State because of its means,
regardless of its ends.
The means orientation of voluntaryism is not unlike the concept of
disinterested attachment associated with the aristocratic spirit.
Similarly, it relates to the Hindu doctrine of nonattached action which
relies on the paradox "that one cannot travel on the path unless one
has become the path itself." Indeed, although one must have an ultimate
goal and destination in life, one's attachment to it eventually becomes
irrelevant and disappears. One's concern must be with the next step
rather than the summit. Only in such a fashion can the exhilaration of
the climb become an end in itself rendering unimportant the attainment
of the peak. That is why the means to the goal become more important
than the goal itself and why the means then become the test of
progress. "To travel on the proper path" is more important than
arriving at one's destination. Thus full effort becomes the measure of
victory rather than the attainment of one's goal. The effort is within
our power and control; the end is not.
The means-end insight encompasses many important points, the least
of which is the commonplace observation that the means one uses must be
consistent with the goal one seeks. It is impossible in the nature of
things to wage a war for peace or to fight politics by becoming
political. Gandhi, who might be considered one of the true aristocrats
of all times, understood that "there is a great mystery concealed in
the fact that the means are more important than the ends." As he wrote:
They say means are after all means. I would say means are
after all everything. As the means, so the end. There is no wall of
separation between means and ends. We have limited control over means
and some over the ends. Realization of the goal is always in exact
proportion to that of the means. ... Our progress towards the goal is
always in exact proportion to the purity of the means. This method may
appear to be long, perhaps too long, but I am convinced, it is the
shortest.
Since the means are the only things we have to work with, they are
at least as important as the actual ends we seek. Means to be means
must be within our reach. As John Dewey explained it, "the end is
merely a series of events viewed at a remote stage and a means is
merely the series viewed at an earlier one." Means must be viewed as
intermediate steps but because of this the one closest to us must be
considered the most important. The most important means is the next
one, the next step in the series of intermediate actions we take to
finally arrive at our destination. If we take a false route, even
though we know where we wish to go, we will never get there. To finish
our journey we must not only begin it but we must begin it in the
proper direction and this means attention to the means. "To reach an
end we must take our minds off from it, and attend to the act which is
next to be performed."
The idea that the ends can justify the means actually has the
process in reverse order. Since the ends pre-exist in the means (like
begets like, we shall reap as we have sowed), no end can ever justify a
means. What actually happens is that the means not only justify what
they accomplish, but they guarantee it. "What today is, makes tomorrow
what it shall be." As Gandhi and many others have said: "take care of
the means you employ and the end will take care of itself." The Rom
(the gypsies) have a saying that "the road leading to a goal does not
separate you from the destination; it is essentially apart of it" and
this readily explains why impure means must result in an impure end.
Different means must inevitably bring about different ends for the
simple reason that they lead one down different paths. For the
voluntaryist concern with an all-voluntary society this necessitates
both eschewing the electoral process as well as revolutionary violence.
Neither of these routes can even approximate voluntaryist goals because
they depart from the voluntaryist spirit. The existence of a
voluntaryist society depends on a change in attitude, an improvement in
the moral tone of the people who comprise it. Therefore our means must
be voluntary, for moral ends can only be attained by moral means. Our
means must be as pure as our ends.
Emma Goldman, in her analysis of the Russian Revolution, written in
the early 1920's, realized that "today is the parent of tomorrow." The
means used to prepare for the future becomes its cornerstone and
therefore she held that the means used to bring about social change
must always harmonize with its purpose:
There is no greater fallacy that the belief that aims and purposes
are one thing, while methods and tactics are another. This conception
is a potent menace to social regeneration. All human experience teaches
that methods and means cannot be separated from the ultimate aim. The
means employed become, through individual habit, and social practice,
part and parcel of the final purpose; they influence it, modify it, and
presently the aims and means become identical. . . . The whole history
of man is continuous proof of the maxim that to divest one's methods of
ethical concepts means to sink into the depths of utter demoralization.
The voluntaryist holds that "the only way to freedom is 'by'
freedom." This path does not dictate what specific form the economic
system of voluntaryism will take. Its only guidelines are that the
resultant system be voluntary, which already implies a respect for
self-ownership and just property titles. A regime of proprietary
justice allows all economic systems to compete on a voluntary basis and
there is no reason why voluntary cooperatives could not exist side by
side with voluntary communes or voluntary capitalist companies. How
people choose to conduct their voluntary affairs in the absence of the
State is up to them.
In advocating an all voluntary society, voluntaryists place the
burden of proof on those who wish to justify any form of the coercive
State. The advocate of any form of invasive coercion -- State or
non-State -- is in a logically precarious position. Coercion does not
convince, nor is it any kind of argument at all. In fact, the
initiation of invasive force is a confession of the failure of the
invader's persuasive powers. As William Godwin said, "if he who employs
coercion against me could mould me to his purposes by argument, no
doubt he would. He pretends to punish me because his argument is
strong, but he really punishes me because he is weak."
The epistemological bias against violence is an essential part of
the voluntaryist spirit. Those in the position of initiating violence
are in a morally and logically indefensible position. As Godwin added,
"Force is an expedient, the use of which is much to be deplored. It is
contrary to the nature of the intellect, which cannot but be improved
by conviction and persuasion. It corrupts the man that employs it, and
the man upon whom it is employed." The burden of proof rests on the
advocates of violence (or the State) because "liberty, or the absence
of coercion, or the leaving of people to think, speak, and act as they
please, is in itself a good thing. It is the object of a favorable
presumption. The burden of proving it inexpedient always lies and
wholly lies on those who wish to abridge it by coercion."
Voluntaryist arguments proceed against State coercion by criticizing
the means, regardless of the ends. Health care or vaccination may be
important, but if they are to be achieved by force (the means) they
"ipso facto" become tainted. If those who advocate compulsory
vaccination or State health care must rely on force to accomplish their
goals, then there is something drastically wrong with their ends.
Vaccination or health care is either good or bad. Its goodness removes
the need for compulsion and its badness destroys the right to coerce
those who oppose it. Coercion never convinces, never brings about a
change of mind.
Similar arguments may be applied against the State itself. Either it
is good or bad. Its goodness should avoid the need to apply invasive
force (for it should be possible to persuade people of its goodness)
and its badness already speaks for itself. If a government cannot rely
wholly on voluntary support, then it deserves not to exist. Statists,
in their anxiety to coerce others, already demonstrate their own lack
of faith in the prescription they suggest.
On the other hand, the voluntaryist spirit is permeated with
peaceful, nonviolent means. Voluntaryism is certainly not the cure all
or end all of social evils, but to the extent that people can be
persuaded to embrace the voluntary principle, it offers the best of all
possible worlds. Voluntaryism is not to be compared with the model of
perfection, it is only offered as the most satisfactory among competing
theories.
Voluntaryists do not operate on the principle that everyone
necessarily knows his or her own best interest, but only that everyone
should have the right to pursue his or her interests as they deem best.
"What is being asserted is the right to act with one's own person and
property and not the necessary wisdom of such action." So long as you
"do your own thing" with your "own" person and property you in no way
violate the spirit of voluntaryism.
The claim that governments have a monopoly on knowledge is implicit
in the arguments of statists. However, given the fact that every
individual person is a unique human being, it is highly unlikely that
any monopolistic government could engineer or plan a society better
than the outcome of the workings of the voluntary principle.
Governments have no exclusive monopoly on knowledge or any exclusive
monopoly of the knowledge of facts which would enable them to run an
economy. In fact, they would have no need to resort to the use of force
if their services were voluntarily desired. The very fact they must
initiate force to sustain themselves proves they are unwanted and
undesired by at least some of the people within their purview.
The fact that the State coercively monopolizes the administration
of justice (courts, police, and law code in a given geographic area)
makes the State, and its employees, automatically suspect. If there are
certain natural laws of justice, then there is no reason for government
to become a coercive monopolist. Because the principles of justice are
grounded in objective, natural laws, they fall within the province of
human knowledge by all who choose to study them and reason them out.
Just as we do not require a government to dictate what is right or
wrong in steel-making, so we do not require a government to dictate
standards and procedures in the realm of justice. If it is possible to
verify objectively that one legal procedure is valid, and another not,
then it does not matter who employs the procedure in question. We
should look to reason and fact; not to government. On the opposing
hand, if there is no such thing as natural law and natural justice,
then government could certainly not claim to administer a thing which
did not exist. In such case there would be no need for government.
Austrian economics, bolstered by the arguments developed by Ludwig
von Mises, has long argued that economic calculation under central
government planning is impossible. Since profit and loss serve as the
central guide for directing the flow of resources, the government of a
centrally planned economy has no rational way of calculating because it
has sabotaged or destroyed the market pricing system. This inability to
make rational economic decisions saps the vitality of any economic
system and is inherent in all forms of government intervention. Despite
their seeming ability to "direct" and "fine-tune" the economy,
government employees and politicians have no special means of obtaining
knowledge, any different from those of others. No one has a monopoly of
knowledge and no single group or person has a monopoly on the truth,
honesty, or fair play. As we have seen of government itself, the very
fact that a centrally planned economy needs to initiate force to
sustain itself indicates that it is not the most efficient method of
social and economic organization. As Murray Rothbard has asked, "if
central planning is more efficient, why has it never voluntarily come
about through the creation of one big firm?"
Voluntaryists, seeing all forms of government as invasive 'per se',
nonetheless realize that the State is just one form of coercive
monopoly which sustains itself by the use of force, albeit legitimized
in the eyes of many. An examination of how to attack coercive monopoly
on the market should shed light on how to undermine State power. After
all, the problem with government is exactly the same problem as with
any other coercive monopoly. The voluntaryist insight points out that
all businesses depend on the cooperation, support, and patronage of
their customers. The ultimate weapon of both consumers and producers on
the market is the option of expressing their indignation by not
purchasing from or selling to, boycotting, ostracizing, and
non-cooperating with the would-be or actual monopolist. In fact, all
market activity on the free market can be interpreted as a variety of
nonviolent resistance against those whom one does not wish to deal
with. An understanding of monopoly theory applies not only to private
monopolies but to any situation where one group has acquired control
over the means of production over a large area.
The voluntaryist spirit attacks government and coercive monopolies
where it hurts them the most: it destroys whatever legitimacy they lay
claim to and urges the withdrawal of the consent and cooperation on
which all organizations depend. The "popular health movement" of the
1830's and 1840's in the United States illustrates this attitude at
work in two distinct ways. First, it shows what incredible diversity
can come about when a government does not attempt to monopolize
knowledge and coerce people into accepting its authority. Second, it
demonstrates the integral nature of freedom. As one medical historian
has explained: "A people accustomed to govern themselves . . . want no
protection but freedom of inquiry and freedom of action. It was the
spirit of the times to throw all fields of business and professional
endeavors open to unrestricted competition -- why not medicine among
the rest? ... Hence medicine, with all other human activities, must
take its chances in the grand competitive scramble characteristic of
the age." If Americans were entitled to religious freedom, why not
medical freedom as well?
"The freedom to discover truth" is what competition is all about.
It is only through voluntary exchanges that the truth of the market
place can be discovered. "The subjectivity of human wants implies that
only individuals participating in an exchange can be the legitimate
judge of their own interests. Competition is a learning process" where
self-ownership and property rights "provide an incentive to make
individuals responsible for their mistakes and give them an incentive
to learn." It is only under voluntaryism that this learning process and
self-responsibility are able to exist.
The voluntary principle insures that while we may have the
possibility of choosing the worst, we also have the right to choose the
best. "By attempting to compel virtue, we eliminate its possibility."
Thus we can see that "freedom is a necessary but not sufficient
condition for the achievement of virtue." Certainly the price of moral
freedom is the responsibility of acting at one's own peril and this
always includes the possibility of failure. The voluntaryist spirit,
however, asserts that the real victory goes not to those who win the
battle but rather to those that fought the best. As David Norton, the
author of Personal Destinies, has explained, "moral nobility is
earned by the efforts of the individual. It comes about in no other
way, it is available to all persons, and it is not a matter of birth
but of individual effort." He reminds us, "that if there is a chance
for a good life, the risk of a bad one must also be accepted."
The voluntaryist spirit, as we have seen, comprises several diverse
areas of libertarian thought. It expresses the epistemological bias
against violence by arguing that rational persuasion is the only means
of judging success. In a very real sense, there are only two relations
possible among men -- that of logic and war. The person who does not
accept physical might as the expression of truth, who rejects the
doctrine that might makes right, demands logic instead of force. The
person who always demands proof and who never assumes anything on faith
alone therefore always remains implicitly a voluntaryist. Such a person
refuses to acknowledge the legitimacy of government because it "wields
the most violence," or because "no human society has ever existed
without it," or because "there would be chaos without
government-provision of law and order."
The resort to violence, in place of argument, is an implicit
confession that one's argument is weak and unconvincing. This explains
why freedom is better than compulsion. To paraphrase the argument of a
19th Century English bishop, who preferred to see Englishmen free (and
possibly drunk) rather than compulsorily sober, we say: With freedom,
in the end we might attain our highest desires, but on the other hand,
compulsion assures us that we would lose both freedom and our most
highly cherished ends. A poor freedom is always better than a rich
slavery.
Voluntaryism also emphasizes the importance of self-ownership and
just property titles, which form the underlying basis for the very
definition of voluntary relationships with others. In fact, we can have
no concept of what it is to violate the rights of others, nor can we
even make the distinction between invasive and non-invasive force
without having an implicit concept of justice, or a code of principles,
which defines what a man is due. In short, the very distinction between
voluntaryism and coercion depends upon and presupposes a theory of
justice in property titles and people. "The principle of self-ownership
means we must treat all others with absolute respect for their
self-ownership. You literally have no claim on the lives of others, nor
they on you. You can only relate to them when, where, and how they want
you to; otherwise you must let them be. You must treat them with
respect for their self-ownership rights or not at all."
Voluntaryists have a clear understanding of the nature of power
(what they call "the voluntaryist insight") -- that all governments and
human institutions depend on the consent and cooperation of its
victims. A person who harbors the voluntaryist spirit understands that
he or she cannot be compelled to do anything against his or her will.
Such a person may suffer the consequences of holding to his or her
belief, but as Corbett Bishop, a World War II conscientious objector
who fasted for over 400 days in government prisons and hospitals,
pointed out: Governments know that they can terrorize individuals into
submitting to tyranny by grabbing the body as hostage and thus hoping
to destroy the spirit (of conscience and resistance within the
individual). But if one repudiates the body and will have nothing to do
with it, the spirit remains free. This is the essence of total
non-cooperation with one's oppressors. The voluntaryist spirit also
reminds us of the stoics "who were different from others" in refusing
to allow pain to disturb the equanimity of their minds and the exercise
of their reason.
There is the story of a Stoic who was captured and told to
renounce his beliefs. He refused and was tortured. Still unable to make
him recant, his captors told him he would be put to death. He answered
they could do whatever they wanted with his body but whatever they did
could not injure his philosophy. That was in his mind and their
authority, in its physical and moral aspect, did not extend [that far].
As the relator of this story continues, "Stoicism was unique in
that its martyrs did not go to death believing their ideas would change
the world." They went to death because their integrity was worth more
to them than their existence. For life, if the courage to die be
lacking, is slavery. The man who is afraid to die cannot possibly live
up to his vision of the truth because he fears for both his person and
property. Thus the only favorable course to those who uphold
voluntaryism is "to remain loyal to one's own integrity. For man, as a
moral agent, has an obligation to value truth for its own sake, not for
any supposed benefits it might bring as a by-product."
The emphasis on the means-end insight in voluntaryism explains why
voluntaryists deem it necessary to take action to achieve their goals.
They know they cannot run away from weakness, that sometimes they must
resist and disobey or else lose their own self-respect. The
voluntaryist spirit is a passionate, disinterested quest for justice
and truth. Since all times are proper for pursuing what is right, they
realize that there is no time like the present; that the first chance
is always the best. They are not bound by difficulties, but by justice.
They must do what they think right and let the consequences take care
of themselves. The love of truth is infectious. One's ideals and ideas
must be professed everywhere; there is no escaping it and no middle
way. If voluntaryism is worth anything, it is worth the effort to try
to work towards it. The truth is something to be done, not just
something to be believed. The true secret of freedom is the courage to
resist. "No one ever remains free who acquiesces in what they know to
be wrong." In the context of the voluntaryist critique of the State,
disobedience to invasive laws is the greatest virtue.
It is said that a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single
step, and the voluntaryist realizes that only by beginning the
long-term efforts to deligitimize the State can any progress be made
toward his or her goal. As futile as a single step may seem, it is only
by taking that very first step that the journey towards voluntaryism
can be started. Those who are moved by the voluntaryist spirit realize
that they must do everything humanly possible to move towards their
goal. People may not feel they have done everything they can do until
they have tried to do it.
It was Ludwig von Mises in his Notes and Recollections
who argued that it is a matter of temperament how we shape our lives in
the knowledge of inescapable catastrophe. In high school he had chosen
a verse by Virgil as his motto: "Tu ne cede malis sed contra audientur
ito." (Do not yield to the bad, but always oppose it with courage.) In
the darkest hours of World War I he recalled this dictum:
Again and again I faced situations from which rational
deliberations could find no escape. But then something unexpected
occurred that brought deliverance. I would not lose courage even now. I
would do everything (I) could do. I would not tire in professing what I
knew to be right . . . I regret only my willingness to compromise, not
my intransigence.
Short Bibliography
- John Dewey, Human Nature and Conduct, New York: Carlton House, 1922, see pp. 34-37 and 230-233.
- Ronald Duncan, Selected Writings of Mahatma Gandhi, Boston: Beacon Press, 1951
- Emma Goldman, My Further Disillusionment in Russia, Garden City, Doubleday, Page & Co., 1924, see Chapter XII, "Afterword".
- William Grampp, Economic Liberalism, (Vol. 1: "The Beginnings"), New York: Random House, 1965, pp. 11 and 26.
- Hanford Henderson, "The Aristocratic Spirit", The North American Review, Vol. 211, March 1920, pp. 387-401.
- Arthur Wollaston Hutton, "The Moral Argument against Compulsory Vaccination", The Humanitarian, Vol. 7, No. 3, September 1895, pp. 177-185.
- Raghavan N. Iyer, The Moral and Political Thought of Mahatma Gandhi, New York: Oxford University Press, 1973, esp. see Chapter 13, "Means and Ends in Politics".
- Terence MacSwiney, Principles of Freedom, Dublin: The Talbot Press. 1921.
- Ludwig von Mises, Notes and Recollections, South Holland: Libertarian Press, 1978.
- David Norton, Personal Destinies, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1974, see. p. 320.
- Murray Rothbard, "Myth and Truth About Libertarianism", Modern Age, Vol. 24, Winter 1988, pp. 9-15.
- Richard Harrison Shryock, "Public Relations of the Medical Profession in Great Britain and the United States: 1600-1870," Annals of Medical History (n.s.), VII, 1930, pp. 308-39, esp. see pp. 319-23.
- Carl Watner, Towards a Theory of Proprietary Justice, Baltimore: by the author, 1976.
- Carl Watner (editor), I Must Speak Out: The Best of The Voluntaryist 1982-1999, San Francisco: Fox & Wilkes, 1999.