This book is designed for students and lay people who want to understand the concept of liberty.
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A free society is based on the rule of law and the common law, while an unfree society is based on the rule of men and discretionary law.
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‘Without Character, a free society is not just unlikely…. it is impossible’
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This is an introductory text for those who would like to understand the indispensible principles and foundations on which a free society must be based.
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The Constitution of Liberty is not a narrowly conceived party tract but the culmination of four decades of reflection on the nature of economic, political
and social life and the possibility of a free society.
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“Society and individuals enjoy liberty because people agree to curtail their own freedoms”
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Self protection is the only reason that justifies mankind in interfering with the freedom of action of other individuals.
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This brief text provides a superb outline description of the institutions that help create a free society and the underlying principles of those institutions.
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The ‘ancients’ and the ‘moderns’ had very different ideas of liberty because of the conditions at the time.
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Collectivism, where ever it is found, destroys personal liberty. In this popular work Hayek explains the process by which freedom is lost through central
planning.
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Seven principles which, if followed readily by policymakers, would make the world stronger, freer and more prosperous.
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A thorough and wide ranging review of those ideas that underpin classical liberalism, and the different versions of this philosophy.
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The concept of “freedom” requires that we have a mutual understanding of its meaning.
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This book presents a view of politics ‘not of force, but of persuasion, of live and let live, rejecting both subjugation and domination’
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