January 2002 -- In recent decades, friends of liberty have celebrated the new economy not only for the tangible benefits it brings but also for its promise of liberation. Technology has dramatically increased the mobility of people, capital, and information, and thus provided them with escape routes from the heavy hand of government. In a global capital market, for example, where a mouse-click can send money across borders in a microsecond, central bankers in Washington, London, Tokyo, and elsewhere can no longer impose onerous controls with impunity.
E-commerce with strong encryption, some have argued, will prove impossible for governments to tax, and the Internet will undermine governments' power to censor information. Some theorists have confidently predicted that the nation-state will become obsolete. How can you rule people and things that won't stay put?
In an ironic parallel, the 1980s and 1990s saw the rise of mobile, stateless aggression. Trade and coercion are opposite modes of human interaction. Yet as global trade expanded, so did the global reach of terrorists, from the Marxist Carlos the Jackal to the Islamic fundamentalist Osama bin Laden. They increased their capacity to kill and destroy by using the same new-economy tools—cell phones, financial networks, cheap travel—that businesses used to create wealth. While financiers were moving capital to countries with the strongest commitment to freedom and the rule of law, terrorists were moving their training camps to the least free, most dictatorial countries. Terrorists formed multinational consortia whose executive and operating units moved fluidly across borders. And they posed a problem for governments whose citizens they harmed: How can you fight a war against an enemy with no address—no capital city, no territory, no army in the field?
That was the question on everyone's mind when President Bush declared war on terrorists after September 11. Now we have the answer. The borders they crossed so fluidly can be patrolled. Their training camps can be bombed. Their cell-phone calls can be intercepted. Their funds can be frozen. And their leaders can be found. To be is to be somewhere, and even if the elusive bin Laden escapes the manhunt in Afghanistan, he and his lieutenants are on the run.
Freedom must still be defended the old-fashioned way: by persuasion, and politics, and eternal vigilance.
By the same token, governments have proven all too capable of controlling speech and commerce when they choose to exert the will. Since September 11, the United States government has sought new controls on banking, airline travel, immigration, and Internet communications--measures that, even if justified, have rightly alarmed friends of liberty. No one is currently arguing that such controls are of no concern because technology will render them unenforceable.
Elsewhere, as Patrick Stephens noted recently in Navigator ("The Internet in Closed Societies ," July-August 2001), authoritarian countries have found ways to censor Internet speech by controlling access-providers. The Associated Press recently reported that Chinese authorities have shut down more than 17,000 Internet bars for failing to block Web sites considered subversive or pornographic, and ordered another 28,000 to install software to block restricted Web sites and keep records of user activities. Like the terrorists, the innocent and productive rely on infrastructure that can be controlled: phone lines, computer networks, Internet access providers, airports.
We can be relieved that the mobility of terrorists has not, after all, made them immune to retaliation. They have not reached escape velocity from the force of government. But neither have those engaged in honest speech and commerce. The ability to flee an oppressive government has always been a bulwark of freedom—but only when there was a freer place to go. That is still true. Cyberspace offers no escape from the necessity of being somewhere—which is to say, within reach of some government. The new economy may swell the tide of freedom where it is already on the rise, but freedom must still be defended the old-fashioned way: by persuasion, and politics, and eternal vigilance.
This article was originally published in the January 2002 issue of Navigator magazine, The Atlas Society precursor to The New Individualist.
David Kelley a fondé The Atlas Society en 1990 et en a été le directeur exécutif jusqu'en 2016. En outre, en tant que Chief Intellectual Officer, il était chargé de superviser le contenu produit par l'organisation : articles, vidéos, interventions lors de conférences, etc. Retraité de TAS en 2018, il reste actif dans les projets de TAS et continue de siéger au conseil d'administration.
Kelley est un philosophe professionnel, un enseignant et un écrivain. Après avoir obtenu un doctorat en philosophie à l'université de Princeton en 1975, il a rejoint le département de philosophie du Vassar College, où il a enseigné une grande variété de cours à tous les niveaux. Il a également enseigné la philosophie à l'université de Brandeis et a donné de nombreuses conférences sur d'autres campus.
Les écrits philosophiques de Kelley comprennent des travaux originaux sur l'éthique, l'épistémologie et la politique, dont beaucoup développent les idées objectivistes en profondeur et dans de nouvelles directions. Il est l'auteur de L'évidence des sensun traité d'épistémologie ; Vérité et tolérance dans l'objectivismesur les questions relatives au mouvement objectiviste ; Unrugged Individualism : La base égoïste de la bienveillanceet L'art du raisonnementun manuel d'introduction à la logique largement utilisé, qui en est aujourd'hui à sa cinquième édition.
M. Kelley a donné des conférences et publié sur un large éventail de sujets politiques et culturels. Ses articles sur les questions sociales et les politiques publiques ont été publiés dans Harpers, The Sciences, Reason, Harvard Business Review, The Freeman, On Principle et ailleurs. Dans les années 1980, il a fréquemment écrit pour Barrons Financial and Business Magazine sur des sujets tels que l'égalitarisme, l'immigration, les lois sur le salaire minimum et la sécurité sociale.
Son livre A Life of One's Own : Individual Rights and the Welfare State (Une vie à soi : les droits individuels et l'État-providence) est une critique des prémisses morales de l'État-providence et une défense des alternatives privées qui préservent l'autonomie, la responsabilité et la dignité de l'individu. Son intervention dans l'émission spéciale "Greed" de John Stossel sur ABC/TV en 1998 a suscité un débat national sur l'éthique du capitalisme.
Expert internationalement reconnu de l'objectivisme, il a donné de nombreuses conférences sur Ayn Rand, ses idées et ses œuvres. Il a été consultant pour l'adaptation cinématographique de Atlas Shruggedet rédacteur en chef de Atlas Shrugged : Le roman, les films, la philosophie.
"Concepts et natures : A Commentary on The Realist Turn (by Douglas B. Rasmussen and Douglas J. Den Uyl)," Reason Papers 42, no. 1, (Summer 2021) ; Ce compte-rendu d'un livre récent comprend une plongée profonde dans l'ontologie et l'épistémologie des concepts.
Les fondements de la connaissance. Six conférences sur l'épistémologie objectiviste.
"La primauté de l'existence" et "L'épistémologie de la perception", The Jefferson School, San Diego, juillet 1985.
"Universals and Induction", deux conférences aux congrès du GKRH, Dallas et Ann Arbor, mars 1989
"Skepticism", Université de York, Toronto, 1987
"The Nature of Free Will", deux conférences au Portland Institute, octobre 1986
"The Party of Modernity", Cato Policy Report, mai/juin 2003 ; et Navigator, novembre 2003 ; un article largement cité sur les divisions culturelles entre les points de vue pré-moderne, moderne (Lumières) et post-moderne.
"I Don't Have To"(IOS Journal, volume 6, numéro 1, avril 1996) et "I Can and I Will"(The New Individualist, automne/hiver 2011) ; des articles d'accompagnement sur la concrétisation du contrôle que nous avons sur nos vies en tant qu'individus.