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Contents

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 October 2023

Jesse Spafford
Affiliation:
Victoria University of Wellington

Summary

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Chapter
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Contents

  1. Acknowledgments

  2. Introduction

    1. I.1The Boundaries of Anarchism

    2. I.2The Aims of the Book

    3. I.3Something for Everyone

  3. 1Social Anarchism

    1. 1.1The Consent Theory of Legitimacy

    2. 1.2The Lockean Proviso

    3. 1.3The Self-Ownership Thesis

    4. 1.4The Advantages of Anarchist Self-Ownership

    5. 1.5The Rejection of Private Property

    6. 1.6Anarchist Claim Rights

    7. 1.7Is Anarchist Self-Ownership Too Permissive?

    8. 1.8Is Anarchist Self-Ownership Too Restrictive?

    9. 1.9Conclusion

  4. 2The Moral Tyranny Constraint

    1. 2.1The Moral Tyranny Constraint

    2. 2.2Explicating the Constraint

    3. 2.3Defending the Constraint

    4. 2.4Three Implications of the Constraint

    5. 2.5Three Objections to the Constraint

    6. 2.6Conclusion

  5. 3You Own Yourself and Nothing Else

    1. 3.1The Proviso and Private Property

    2. 3.2The Lockean Proviso and Self-Ownership

    3. 3.3Comparing Baselines

    4. 3.4Defending and Emending the Nonexistence Baseline

    5. 3.5Appropriation and Children

    6. 3.6Conclusion

  6. 4Property and Legitimacy

    1. 4.1Territorial Legitimacy

    2. 4.2A Consent Theory of Territorial Legitimacy

    3. 4.3The Absence of Appropriation

    4. 4.4Land, Resources, and Artifacts

    5. 4.5Initial Appropriation and Obligation Imposition

    6. 4.6The Propertarian Objection

    7. 4.7Commonsense Distinctions

    8. 4.8Consent Theory and Self-Ownership

    9. 4.9Philosophical Anarchism and the Anarchist Conclusion

    10. 4.10Conclusion

  7. 5Entitlement Theory without Entitlements

    1. 5.1Hobbesian Moral Tyranny

    2. 5.2The Incompatibilist Argument

    3. 5.3The Left-Libertarian Solution

    4. 5.4Just Holdings vs. Just Distributions

    5. 5.5Is Entitlement Necessary for Justice?

    6. 5.6Wilt Chamberlain and the Anarchist Conclusion

    7. 5.7Libertarian Egalitarianism

    8. 5.8Conclusion

  8. 6Luck Egalitarianism without Moral Tyranny

    1. 6.1Three Objections to Prudential Contextualism

    2. 6.2Moralized Contextualism

    3. 6.3A Theory of Sanctionable Choice

    4. 6.4Applying the Theory

    5. 6.5Anarchism without Moral Tyranny

    6. 6.6Amending the Theory

    7. 6.7Additional Advantages of the Theory

    8. 6.8The Disadvantage Creation Account

    9. 6.9Conclusion

  9. 7A State-Tolerant Anarchism

    1. 7.1Two Desiderata of Political Anarchism

    2. 7.2Twelve Analyses of Statehood

    3. 7.3A State-Tolerant Anarchism

    4. 7.4In Defense of Philosophical Anarchism

    5. 7.5Conclusion

  10. References

  11. Index

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  • Contents
  • Jesse Spafford, Victoria University of Wellington
  • Book: Social Anarchism and the Rejection of Moral Tyranny
  • Online publication: 19 October 2023
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  • Contents
  • Jesse Spafford, Victoria University of Wellington
  • Book: Social Anarchism and the Rejection of Moral Tyranny
  • Online publication: 19 October 2023
Available formats
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Save book to Google Drive

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  • Contents
  • Jesse Spafford, Victoria University of Wellington
  • Book: Social Anarchism and the Rejection of Moral Tyranny
  • Online publication: 19 October 2023
Available formats
×