Includes bibliographical references (pages 151-154) and index.
CONTENTS NOTE
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Part I. Self-ownership and world-ownership -- Self-ownership and equality -- Making the unjust provide for the disabled -- Part II. Punishment and self-defence -- The right to punish -- Killing the innocent in self-defence -- Part III. Political society -- Political society as a voluntary association -- Left-libertarianism versus liberal egalitarianism -- The problem of intergenerational sovereignty.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
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"Michael Otsuka sets out to vindicate left-libertarianism, a political philosophy which combines stringent rights of control over one's own mind, body, and life with egalitarian rights of ownership of the world. Otsuka reclaims the ideas of John Locke from the libertarian right and shows how his Second Treatise of Government provides the theoretical foundations for a left-libertarianism which is both more libertarian and more egalitarian than the Kantian liberal theories of John Rawls and Thomas Nagel.
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Otsuka's libertarianism is founded on a right of self-ownership. Here he is at one with 'right-wing' libertarians, such as Robert Nozick, in endorsing the highly anti-paternalistic and anti-moralistic implications of this right. But he parts company with these libertarians in so far as he argues that such a right is compatible with a fully egalitarian principle of equal opportunity for welfare. In embracing this principle, his own version of left-libertarianism is more strongly egalitarian than others which are currently well known"--Jacket.