Spontaneous order is a distinctively modern idea. It plays a limited but real role in Kant's social thought, says Roderick Long.
Gregory Salmieri notices a gap between Kant's theory of duty and Mark D. White's.
Professor Hicks explains why metaphysics and the rationales of actions can't be so easily dismissed.
Kant's philosophy is flawed, says Roderick Long, but the errors are understandable and made in good faith, says Roderick Long.
Kant committed to a view of justice that is at odds with the classical liberal one.
Roderick Long looks at Rousseau's influence on Kant's theories of property and government.
Roderick T. Long offers a complex view of Immanuel Kant, who emerges as more often liberal in principle than in practice.
Stephen R. C. Hicks argues that if our case for liberty comes from a mysterious other realm, then perhaps we have no case at all.