Robert Nozick’s Anarchy, State, and Utopia (New York: Basic Books, 1974) is an “invisible hand” variant of a Lockean contractarian attempt to justify the State, or at least a minimal State confined to the functions of protection. Beginning with a free-market anarchist state of nature, Nozick portrays the State as emerging, by an invisible hand process that violates no one’s rights, first as a dominant protective agency, then to an “ultra-minimal state,” and then finally to a minimal state.
Robert Nozick and the Immaculate Conception of the State
CITE THIS ARTICLE
Rothbard, Murray N. “Robert Nozick and the Immaculate Conception of the State.” Journal of Libertarian Studies 1, No.1 (1977): 45-57.