Why Government at All?
From Libertarian Labyrinth
William Henry Van Ornum is not one of the names that we remember particularly, but he was one of the more important anarchist voices in the pages of The Twentieth Century, and Why Government at All? deserves its place among the more ambitious works produced by anarchists in the U. S. There is a good deal here to disagree with, but that's to be expected. The anarchist tradition in the U. S. produced lots of articulate writers but very few extended treatments. The ones we have are treasures that ought to be preserved.
Why Government at All?
A Philosophical Examination of the Principles of Human Government, Involving an Analysis of the Constituents of Society, and a Consideration of the Principles and Purposes of all Human Association.
William Henry Van Ornum
Charles H. Kerr & Co., 1892
issued without copyright
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
PART I. REVIEWS.
- Introduction
- Henry George: his Economic Absurdities and Contradictions
- The Single Tax: Inadequate, Illogical, Cumbersome, and Unjust
- State Socialism: its Origin, Objects, and Methods
- State Socialism: its Foundation and Necessary Development
- The Fallacies of Karl Marx
- The Fallacies of Edward Bellamy
- The Fallacies of P. J. Proudhon and his School
- Social Palliatives
- Reform by Political Methods
PART II. PRINCIPLES
- The Motive of Human Action
- The Object of Human Life
- The Purpose and Condition of Human Society
- The Development of Individual Character
- Human Equality
- On Property
- Human Liberty
- Slavery
- The Church and the State
PART III. GOVERNMENT—LAW
- Recapitulation
- Government: Its Nature, Origin, and Tendencies
- Government: Its Functions
- The Real Scope and Functions of Civil Administration
- Government: Its Relation to Public Enterprises
- Crime: Its Nature and Cause
- Crime: Its Treatment
- Public Education
- How Laws are Made
- Summary
PART IV. THE REMEDY
