Schools of Thought in Classical Liberalism – part 1: Introduction

What is the proper role of government? What should governments do, and what should they not do? Classical liberals all agree that government should be limited, but they disagree about how they get to that conclusion. The following video series analyzes different schools of thought in classical liberalism.

transcript:

What I want to look at today is: What is the proper role of government? What should governments do, and what should they not do? Classical liberals all agree that government should be limited, but they disagree about how they get to that conclusion. And it's those differences that I really want to look at today. My goal is not to advocate one or other of these positions—I certainly have a view on those questions—but I want to approach it with some degree of intellectual humility.

As I always say, I know some of the things I believe in are wrong; I just don't know which ones. So how do I discover what of my ideas are wrong? I can only do that by articulating, presenting them as clearly as possible and listening to peoples' disagreements—where they think I'm wrong on those issues—and I get that little bit closer to the truth. And that's what I want to encourage you to do today, is to look at these different ideas, think about these different ideas, and come to you own conclusions about which of these you agree with and which of these ideas that you disagree with. And I want to approach it by looking at three different questions that anyone concerned about the role of government should care about.

So the first question is: How do we decide what the role of government should be? What is the methodology or the philosophy that will determine how we decide this question? Secondly, why should government be limited? Unless you're a totalitarian, that is someone who believes that government should control every aspect of your life, then you believe that government should be limited. The question then becomes, why do you think it should be limited? Should it be limited because of the consequences of government actions, or should it be limited because people have natural rights, which government should not interfere with? And then the third question is: What is the legitimate role of government? What should governments do, and what should government not do?

I'm going to ask those three questions with reference to five different schools of thought. All classical liberal, all believe that liberty is the most important political value, but disagree on these three fundamental questions.