Huemer's Common-Sense Libertarianism By Bryan Caplan

My very favorite section from Mike Huemer’s The Problem of Political Authority begins by distancing himself from other libertarian philosophers:

The ideas of this chapter will strike many as too extreme and far too libertarian. Are we really forced to accept such conclusions? Surely, to arrive at these radical conclusions, I must have made some extreme and highly controversial assumptions along the way, assumptions that most readers should feel free to reject? I am the first to say that libertarian authors have frequently relied upon controversial philosophical assumptions in deriving their political conclusions. Ayn Rand, for example, thought that capitalism could only be successfully defended by appeal to ethical egoism, the theory according to which the right action for anyone in any circumstance is always the most selfish action. Robert Nozick is widely read as basing his libertarianism on an absolutist conception of individual rights, according to which an individual’s property

rights and rights to be free from coercion can never be outweighed by any social consequences. Jan Narveson relies on a metaethical theory according to which the correct moral principles are determined by a hypothetical social contract. Because of the controversial nature of these ethical or metaethical theories, most readers find the libertarian arguments based on them easy to reject. It is important to observe, then, that I have appealed to nothing so controversial in my own reasoning. In fact, I reject all three of the foundations for libertarianism mentioned in the preceding paragraph. I reject egoism, since I believe that individuals have substantial obligations to take into account the interests of others. I reject ethical absolutism, since I believe an individual’s rights may be overridden by sufficiently important needs of others. And I reject all forms of social contract theory, since I believe the social contract is a myth with no moral relevance for us…

Huemer then succinctly sums up the novelty of his approach:

The foundation of my libertarianism is much more modest: common sense morality. At first glance, it may seem paradoxical that such radical political conclusions could stem from anything designated as “common sense.” I do not, of course, lay claim to common sense political views. I claim that revisionary political views emerge out of common sense moral views. As I see it, libertarian political philosophy rests on three broad ideas: i) First, a non-aggression principle in interpersonal ethics. Roughly, this is the idea that individuals should not attack, kill, steal from, or defraud one another, and in general, that individuals should not coerce one another, aside from a relatively narrow range of special circumstances. ii) Second, a recognition of the coercive nature of government. When the state promulgates a law, the law is generally backed up by a threat of punishment, which is supported by credible threats of physical force directed against those who would disobey the state. iii) Third, a skepticism of political authority as traditionally conceived. The upshot of this skepticism is, very roughly, that the state may not do what it would be wrong for any non-governmental person or organization to do.

Why should we accept these three broad ideas?

The main positive ethical assumption of libertarianism,

the non-aggression principle, is the most difficult to precisely

articulate. In truth, it is a complex collection of principles,

including prohibitions on theft, assault, murder, and so on. I cannot

completely articulate this principle or set of principles. Fortunately,

it is not the locus of disagreement between libertarians and partisans

of other political ideologies, for the “non-aggression principle,” as I

use the term, is simply the collection of prohibitions on mistreating

other individuals that are accepted in common sense morality. Almost no

one, regardless of political ideology, thinks that theft, assault,

murder, and so on are morally acceptable. It is not necessary to have a

complete list of these prohibitions, since the arguments for libertarian

conclusions have not depended upon laying claim to any such complete

list. It is also important to

understand that I am not making any

particularly strong assumptions about these ethical prohibitions. I am

not, for example, assuming that theft is never permissible. I am simply

assuming that it is not permissible under normal circumstances, as

dictated by common sense morality. The second principle, that of

the coercive nature of government, is equally difficult to dispute. The

coercive nature of government is commonly forgotten or ignored in

political discourse, in which the justification for coercion is seldom

discussed. But virtually no one actually denies that the state regularly

relies upon coercion. It is, then, the notion of authority that

forms the true locus of dispute between libertarianism and other

political philosophies: libertarians are skeptical about authority,

whereas most people accept the state’s authority in more or less the

terms in which the state claims it. This is what enables most to endorse

governmental behavior that would otherwise appear to violate individual

rights: non-libertarians assume that most of the moral constraints that

apply to other agents do not apply to the state.

Hence the final title of the book:

Thus,

I have focused on defending skepticism about authority, by addressing

the most interesting and important theories of authority. In defending

this skepticism, I have, again, relied upon no particularly

controversial ethical assumptions. I have considered the factors that

are said to confer authority on the state, and found that in each case,

either those factors are not actually present (as in the case of

consent-based accounts of authority), or those factors simply do not

suffice to confer the sort of authority claimed by the state. The latter

point is established by the fact that a nongovernmental agent to whom

those factors applied would generally not be ascribed anything like

political authority. I have suggested that the best explanation for the

widespread inclination to ascribe authority to the state lies in a

collection of non-rational biases that would operate whether or not

there were any legitimate authorities. Most people simply never stop to

question the notion of political authority, but once we begin to examine

it carefully, the idea of a group of people with a special right to

command everyone else fairly dissolves. These three ideas-the

non-aggression principle, the coercive nature of government, and

skepticism about authority-together demand a libertarian political

philosophy. Most government actions violate the non-aggression

principle-that is, they are actions of a sort that would be condemned by

common sense morality if they were performed by any non-governmental

agent. In particular, the government generally deploys coercion in

circumstances

and for reasons that would by no means be considered adequate to

justify coercion on the part of a private individual or organization.

Therefore, unless we accord the state some special exemption from

ordinary moral constraints, we must condemn most government actions. The

actions that remain are just the ones that libertarians accept.

Disagree with the conclusion? Huemer wants you to name a specific premise you reject:

How

might one avoid the libertarian conclusion? Only by rejecting one of

the three core principles I have identified. It seems to me extremely

unpromising to question the coercive nature of government, and I doubt

that any theorist will wish to take that tack. Some theorists will

question common sense morality. I have not undertaken a general defense

of common sense morality in this book, and I shall not do so now. Every

book must begin somewhere, and beginning with such assumptions as that

under normal conditions, one may not rob, kill, or attack other people,

seems to me reasonable enough. This is about the least controversial,

least dubious starting point for a book of political philosophy that I

have seen, and I think few readers will feel happy about rejecting it. The

least implausible way of resisting libertarianism remains that of

resisting the libertarian’s skepticism about authority. I have addressed

what strike me as the most interesting, influential, or promising

accounts of political authority-the traditional social contract theory,

the hypothetical social contract theory, the appeal to democratic

processes, and appeals to fairness and good consequences. But I cannot

address every possible account of authority, and I suspect that a fair

number of thinkers will react to my performance by proposing alternative

accounts of authority.

This leads to his preemptive response to unaddressed criticism:

I

also suspect, however, that the general strategy I have relied upon

will be able to be extended to such alternative accounts. A theory of

authority will cite some feature of the state (taking “feature” very

broadly) as the source of its authority. My strategy begins by imagining

some private agent that possesses that feature… For instance, the

property of being something that would be agreed to by all reasonable

people, the property of being actually accepted by the majority of

society, and the property of producing very good consequences, are all

properties that a non-governmental organization, or the policies of such

an organization, could possess. As I say, then, we imagine a

non-governmental agent with the relevant feature. We then realize that

intuitively, we would not ascribe anything like political authority to

that agent. In particular, we would not ascribe it a comprehensive,

content-independent, supreme entitlement to coerce obedience from other

people. And so we conclude that the proposed feature fails as a ground

of political authority.

(Endnotes omitted. I’m quoting from the draft, so there are slight differences from the final manuscript).

I

suspect that many readers of Huemer’s book will furrow their brows and

say, “That’s it? That’s all you’ve got?” But this perceived defect is

one of the book’s chief virtues. Unlike almost every other political

philosopher, Huemer doesn’t waste your time. He doesn’t try to

convince you of seven odd claims, then try to convince you that those

seven odd claims somehow imply his conclusion. (See Rawls’ A Theory of Justice for an egregious example). Huemer doesn’t try to make

readers feel intellectually inferior by making them learn a lot of

obscure jargon. Instead, he clearly tells readers what he believes,

and why he believes it, and his conclusion follows directly from his

premises. Readers of philosophy should settle for nothing less – or

more – than this.