Anarchy, State, and Utopia

by Robert Nozick
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The foundational text of libertarian thought, named one of the 100 Most Influential Books since World War II (Times Literary Supplement)

First published in response to John Rawls' A Theory of Justice, Robert Nozick's Anarchy, State, and Utopia has since become one of the defining texts in classic libertarian thought. Challenging and ultimately...
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Published By Basic Books

Format Paperback

Category

Number Of Pages 400

Publication Date 11/12/2013

ISBN 9780465051007

Dimensions 5.45 inches x 8.25 inches


"A major event in contemporary political philosophy...[Nozick] is always stimulating; an open-minded study of what he has to say could be a healthy tonic for romantic leftists."—Peter Singer, New York Review of Books

"[Nozick's] critique of America's social welfare system...continues to define the debate between conservatives and liberals."—Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, New York Times

"[S]imply and elegantly written, with charm and wit...brilliantly reasoned and contrary."

Washington Post

"No contemporary philosopher possesses a more imaginative mind, broader interests, or greater dialectical abilities than Robert Nozick."—Harper's

"Complex, sophisticated and ingenious."—The Economist

"[Nozick's] powers of argument are profound, and his insights are at times staggering in their brilliance."—New Republic

"[Nozick is] one of the 20th century's greatest political theorists."—The Guardian

"[A] powerful critique of the Left-liberal moral philosophy that underpinned the welfare state...a kind of libertarian manifesto."—Telegraph (UK)

"This book is the best piece of sustained analytical argument in political philosophy to have appeared for a very long time."—Mind

"[Nozick's] faculties of reasoning and imagination are rare; his learning is enormous and interconnected...His ability to surround a subject, to anticipate objections, to see through weakness and pretense, to extract all the implications of a contention, to ask a huge number of relevant questions about a seemingly settled matter, to enlarge into full significance what has only been sketched by others, is amazing."—George Kateb

"A brilliant and important book, bound to contribute notably both to theory and, in time, to the good of society."—W. V. Quine, Harvard University

 
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