Defending the Undefendable

Defending the Undefendable is a 1976 book by American economist Walter Block.[1] It has been translated into ten foreign languages.[2] The book advances the thesis that various people are stigmatized for engaging in acts that are often illegal or disreputable yet do not involve violence or violation of property. Block further proposes these people may in fact benefit society. Each chapter examines a different type of person, including prostitutes, blackmailers, misers and litterers.

Defending the Undefendable
AuthorWalter Block
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectMoral philosophy, political economy
PublisherFleet Press
Publication date
1976; 2008 Mises Institute edition
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages256
ISBN9781933550176
OCLC248638106
973.925
LC ClassHB95 .B58

The original edition had illustrations from Charles Rodrigues.

Reception

Cable news pundit John Stossel said of it, "Defending the Undefendable... opened my eyes to the beauties of libertarianism. It explains that so much of what is assumed to be evil – is not."[3] In 2011, writing that economics "illuminates what common sense overlooks", Stossel called the book "eye-opening" and detailed its contents.[4]

Economist Murray Rothbard thought that by emphasizing marginal scenarios, Defending the Undefendable "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.[5]

The philosopher Tibor Machan, who generally shared Block's libertarian leanings, wrote that the book "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."[6]

References

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