Literature Library
Defending the Undefendable
Walter Block
| Kind | Volume | Size | Date Added | |
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PDF File | 7,079 KB | 4/2/2008 | |
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ebook (.epub) | 2,504 KB | 3/30/2011 | |
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$13.00 | |||
Professor Block's book is in a new edition from the Mises Institute, completely reset and beautifully laid out in an edition worthy of its contents.
It is among the most famous of the great defenses of victimless crimes and controversial economic practices, from profiteering and gouging to bribery and blackmail. However, beneath the surface, this book is also an outstanding work of microeconomic theory that explains the workings of economic forces in everyday events and affairs.
Murray Rothbard explains why:
"Defending the Undefendable performs the service of highlighting, the fullest and starkest terms, the essential nature of the productive services performed by all people in the free market. By taking the most extreme examples and showing how the Smithian principles work even in these cases, the book does far more to demonstrate the workability and morality of the free market than a dozen sober tomes on more respectable industries and activities. By testing and proving the extreme cases, he all the more illustrates and vindicates the theory."
F.A. Hayek agreed, writing the author as follows: "Looking through Defending the Undefendable made me feel that I was once more exposed to the shock therapy by which, more than fifty years ago, the late Ludwig von Mises converted me to a consistent free market position. … Some may find it too strong a medicine, but it will still do them good even if they hate it. A real understanding of economics demands that one disabuses oneself of many dear prejudices and illusions. Popular fallacies in economics frequently express themselves in unfounded prejudices against other occupations, and showing the falsity of these stereotypes you are doing a real services, although you will not make yourself more popular with the majority."
The contents of this book include:
- Foreword by Murray N. Rothbard
- Commentary by F.A. Hayek
- Introduction
- Sexual
- The Prostitute
- The Pimp
- The Male Chauvinist Pig
- Medical
- The Drug Pusher
- The Drug Addict
- Free Speech
- The Blackmailer
- The Slanderer or Libeler
- The Denier of Academic Freedom
- The Advertiser
- The Person Who Yells "Fire!" in a Crowded Theatre
- Outlaw
- The Gypsy Cab Driver
- The Ticket Scalper
- The Dishonest Cop
- Financial
- The (Non-Government) Counterfeiter
- The Miser
- The Inheritor
- The Moneylender
- The Non-Contributor to Charity
- Business and Trade
- The Curmudgeon
- The Slumlord
- The Ghetto Merchant
- The Speculator
- The Importer
- The Middleman
- The Profiteer
- Ecology
- The Stripminer
- The Litterer
- The Wastemakers
- Labor
- The Fat Capitalist-Pig Employer
- The Scab
- The Rate Buster
- The Employer of Child Labor
SUPPORTERS
"Looking through 'Defending the Undefendable' made me feel that I was
once more exposed to the shock therapy by which, more than 50 years
ago, the late Ludwig von Mises converted me to a consistent free market
position. Even now I am occasionally at first incredulous and feel that
"this is going too far," but usually find in the end that Block is
right. Some may find it too strong a medicine, but it wills till do
them good even if they hate it. A real understanding of economics
demands that one disabuses oneself of many dear prejudices and
illusions. Popular fallacies in economics frequently express themselves
in unfounded prejudices against other occupations, and in showing the
falsitty of these stereotypes Block is doing a real servic, although he
will not make himself more popular with the majority."
--FA Hayek
"Judging from the outraged responses in many libertarian quarters, many
of 'our people' are not ready for this exciting and shocking adventure.
Since libertarians are, or are supposed to be on the forefront of
thought, since their whole lives have been an intellectual adventure in
many ways, the hostility becomes even more mysterious."
--Murray N. Rothbard
"There are things that I strongly agree with and things that I strongly
disagree with, but the book thoughout is amusingly and sharply
reasoned, couragous and always provocative."
--Henry Hazlitt
"Many years ago Hazlitt's little masterpiece, Economics in One Lesson,
demonstrated how, in order to measure the consequences of economic
activies, one must look beyond their immediately obvious effects to
thir secondary effects. Here Professor Block sets out highly
specific, and sometimes shocking examples of Hazlitt's
thesis. By concentrating on the positive economic
contributions of extreme cases, he forces the reader's consideration
and greater appreciation of these principles."
--Robert D. Kephart
"It is a magnificent book, a trailblazer. I would call it
;Drano for Clogged Minds,' except that Drano is neither amusing nor
stimulating, and this book is both. I suggest buying two
copies: one for yourself and one for the person you want most to catch
up with you."
--Roger Lea MacBride
"...More than almost any current book, DTU will wake the reader from
his dogmatic slumbers. It is eminently readable, challenging,
and provocative."
--John Hospers
"Startling and illuminating! Block's lucid defenses often convince:
sometimes they lead us to sharpen our attack. In either case,
the reader cannot fail to be instructed and challenged by this
mind-stretching, provocative, and occasionally infuriating book."
--Robert Nozick
"What the critics have missed is that a book of libertarianism, not
Objectivism, not Christianity, DTU used the most effective method for
illustrating and teaching moral principles. Shock your
friends and educate them."
--Don Ernsberger, S.I.L.
"This witty and wonderful book is a veritable manual of the 'joy of
freedom.' IUf we were only half as interested in liberty as in lust, we
would not have half the problems we have."
--Dr. Thomas S. Szasz
"The most entertaining and one of the most instructive economics books
I've ever read. Block's unique style helps you see what's
going on around you quickly and clearly. The book is
terrific. Taking the most extreme examples possible and
clarifying them will do more to bend the reader's economic thinking
than a slow steady course in good economics."
--Harry Browne
"We can congratulate Dr. Block for some iconoclastic and courageous
interpretations."
--Albert Ellis (psychologist)
"After reading Block's book, we recognize the pimp as an honest broker
and the uncorrupted cop as the Nuremberg defendant who always followed
orders. We are reminded that strip mining of coal allows
miners to escape black-lung disease and cave-ins... Block gives the
reader succinct yet penetrating criticisms of the Federal Reserve
System, and the Keynesian paradox of savings. His chapter on
charity is the best modern defense of social Darwinism that I have ever
read."
--Williamson Evers
"It is a brilliant, relentlessly argued book, pushing the libertarian
case to its extreme limits...take seriously Ayn Rand;s dictum that one
should be willing to defend the least attractive instance of a
principle, and has done precisely that."
--Roy Childs (Editor: Libertarian Review)
"Shatters, one by one, each of our liberal steroetypes. It's
a pleasure to read and a treasure trove of ammunition for the defender
of the free market."
--Tom G. Palmer (The New Gaurd)
"toleration of unpopular religious and cultural groups has always been
one of the chief tenets of classical liberalism...Block carries this
libertarian principle to its logical and radical conclusion: toleration
of all non-aggressive pursuits."
--Lawrence White (Harvard Political Review)
"A remarkable book. I found myself agreeing with Block for
most of the time, and his argument is often ingenious. Spend
a pleasant evening reading aloud some of his chapters (they are really
quite short)."
--Henry Meulen (The Individualist)
DETRACTORS
"There can be no question of my writing a testimonial on behalf of this
book."
--Nathaniel Branden
"Defending the Undefendable-A doomed attempt, one would say.
Like thinking the unthinable, uttering the unutterable, or calculating
the incalculable. As the philosopher remarked, wherefor one
cannot speak, thereabout one had better keep quiet.
This assemblage of defences
cannot (can it?) be facetious since it is ushered in by the author;s
pious reference to a 'passion fro justice...
Rather non persuasive are the
cases made out for the Dishonest Cop, the Speculator in food, the
Non-Contributor to Charity, the Stripminer, the Drug Pusher, the Denier
of Academic Freedom, and the Person who yells 'fire' in a crowded
theatre. A passion for justice ought to inspire one to
greater efforts."
--D.J. Enright (London Times Literary Supplement)
"...A positive menace to the libertarian movement. His
smart-alecky, sensationalist style, the silly and false social and
psychological assumptions he uses to back up some otherwise (mostly)
valid political and economic points, the frivolous and insensitive
attitudes he displays toward serious human problems all serve to
confuse and distract from the valid points. Most people will
be difficult to convince on rational political grounds without
obscuring the issue with other half-baked, offensive, and unnecessary
arguments. The book will be offensive to people not just
because his general attitude will be interpreted as callous, asinine,
and an affront to human dignity. It will surely reinforce the
worst stereotypes people have about capitalists."
--Sharon Presley (Laissez Faire Books)
"..The wrong book at the wrong time...An absolutely mad way of
introducing someone to libertarianism...I am convinced that it is
probably a short run strategic disaster. One needs not only a
steel will based on solid libertarian premises to accept Professor
Block's message, but one needs a cast iron stomach as well.
Those whom he defends are often, if not usually, the dregs of society:
we could even say the very scum of the earth."
--Walter Grinder (Libertarian Review)
"DTU is a work of unrealized potential. The editing is
sloppy. And the quality of the writing varies from chapter to
chapter. Many good arguments, and indeed the book itself,
founder over a simple misconception: Block is misusing the word
her...He is not consistently attentive to detail, nor is he very
ambitious in enriching his rich thesis with examples and
anecdotes. If he had attended better to the art of writing
and spared us the silly insistence of making all of society's rogues
into heroes, thes his very important thesis might well have become a
very important book."
--Jamaes D. Davidson (Libertarian Review)
"Not only does he defend prostitutes, pimps, counterfeiters, ticket
scalpers, slumlords, blackmailers, libelors, stripminers, letterers,
and scabs (among others), he actually has the temerity to call them
heroes! Block even has the gall to challenge the most
enduring shiboleth of higher education, academic freedom."
--Dan C. Heldman (Universitas)
"The polarization of opinions on Block's book should not be
surprising. It is reflection of the book's schizophrenic
nature-a bizarre combination of both
excellent and horrible elements. Apparently the endorsers
chose to consider only the Dr. Jeckyll side of DTU and either ignored
or failed to take seriously Mr. Hyde."
--Sharon Presley (Reason)
"Political and economic defense of the voluntary activities of
society's 'scapegoats' -pimps, slumlords, moneylenders, etc.
Done in a sensationalistic style, much
of the reasoning is questionable and unnecessarily offensive.
Not a good introduction to libertarianism."
--Laissez Faire Books Catalogue
"Block defends some of the silliest ideas in support of an essentially
good cause...He raises some stimulating issues, even if in an
intellectually inadequate fashion...A foolish consistency may be the
'hobgoblin og little minds,' as Emerson said, but serious inconsistancy
(as in this book) is the downfall of many theories about morality and
law."
--Tibor Machan (World Research Ink)
Who's right? Make up your own mind! Order this provocative book today.

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