Premium Only Content

Dr J C Lester on his New Theory of Liberty. (part 2 of 3.)
A brief statement of Lester's five-step libertarian philosophical theory
The main philosophical problem is that most libertarians don’t have an explicit theory of liberty. Consequently, for instance, they can’t explain how some property rights fit liberty while others don’t. This theory aims to make explicit the philosophical theory that is entailed by libertarianism. This is done by distinguishing five steps that other libertarians usually conflate to varying degrees.
Note that liberty is conceptually about the absence of some sort of constraint on something. But interpersonal (or social) liberty is about the absence of some sort of constraint on people by each other.
First, therefore, we must ask: in what way—at its most abstract—do we want other people not to constrain us? We want them not to initiate constraints on our preference-satisfaction. This is libertarian liberty-in-itself.
Second, how do we theoretically solve the obvious problem of clashing preferences in practice? When “the absence of initiated interpersonal constraints on preference satisfaction” (initiated impositions, for short) is not fully possible, then this can only be maximised in the most plausible way.
Third, what are the practical implications of applying this abstract theory? In a state of nature, applying it gives us three prima facie rules of maximal liberty-in-practice: 1) initial ultimate control of one’s body, 2) initial ultimate control of one’s used resources, and 3) consensual interpersonal interactions and resource transfers. Any other rules would typically initiate more interpersonal impositions.
Fourth, how do these practical implications relate to property? To institutionalise these practical rules as legally enforceable property rights is an additional logical step. Thus, we see that property, even self-ownership, is only the fourth step rather than the first (let alone an axiom).
Fifth, where do normative rights, morals, and values fit into the positive libertarian system? They are a further separate issue. Thus, they are only the fifth step rather than the first (let alone an axiom).
There is an important secondary, epistemological, problem. This is that most libertarians are justificationists (or foundationists) rather than critical rationalists. But that will not be discussed here.
———Dr J. C. Lester
https://www.meste.org/ojs/index.php/mest/article/view/1279
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Escape-Leviathan-Libertarianism-without-Justificationism/dp/1908684089
-
LIVE
Steven Crowder
3 hours ago🔴Candace Just Claimed Trump Killed Charlie
26,726 watching -
LIVE
Side Scrollers Podcast
23 minutes ago🔴FIRST EVER RUMBLE SUB-A-THON🔴DAY 4🔴WAKE YOUR ASS UP!
879 watching -
41:55
The Rubin Report
2 hours agoListen to ‘The View’ Crowd Gasp as Whoopi Lies to Their Faces
62.8K19 -
LIVE
The Mel K Show
1 hour agoMORNINGS WITH MEL K - Cause and Effect: The Intentional Dumbing Down of a Nation - 10-23-25
728 watching -
LIVE
ReAnimateHer
1 day agoFIRST Live Stream Rusty Hookin
17 watching -
LIVE
The Shannon Joy Show
3 hours ago🔥SJ Show 10/23 * Rep Tom Massie LIVE On Trump’s Beef Rancher Rug Pull * Civil Unrest Incoming * How To Prepare W/ Brett Miller 🔥
245 watching -
LIVE
Grant Stinchfield
2 hours agoTeachers’ Lounges Turned Into Political War Rooms
85 watching -
1:01:04
VINCE
3 hours agoTop Democrat Says the Quiet Part Out Loud | Episode 153 - 10/23/25
191K208 -
LIVE
LFA TV
14 hours agoLIVE & BREAKING NEWS! | THURSDAY 10/23/25
3,808 watching -
DVR
Nikko Ortiz
2 hours agoHalloween Death Devices In Real Life... |Rumble Live
18.9K1