Disable ads!
Julian Lincoln Simon
Part of a series on Libertarianism Origins Age of Enlightenment Aristotelianism Classical liberalism Concepts Anti-authoritarianism Anti-militarism Anti-statism Anti-war Argumentation ethics Class struggle Communes Counter-economics Crypto-anarchism Decentralization Direct action Dispute resolution organization Economic freedom Egalitarianism Expropriative anarchism Free market Free-market environmentalism Free society Free trade Free will Freedom of association Freedom of contract Gift economy Homestead principle Illegalism Individual Individualism Individual reclamation Laissez-faire Liberty Limited government Localism Marriage privatization Natural and legal rights Night-watchman state Non-aggression principle Non-interventionism Non-politics Non-voting Participatory economics Polycentric law Private defense agency Propaganda by the deed Property Really Really Free Market Refusal of work Self-governance Self-ownership Spontaneous order Squatting Stateless society Tax resistance Title-transfer theory of contract Voluntary association Voluntary society Wage slavery Workers' self-management Schools Agorism Anarchism Anarcho-capitalism Autarchism Bleeding-heart libertarianism Christian libertarianism Collectivist anarchism Consequentialist libertarianism Free-market anarchism Fusionism Geolibertarianism Green anarchism Green libertarianism Individualist anarchism Insurrectionary anarchism Left-libertarianism Left-wing market anarchism Libertarian communism Libertarian Marxism Libertarian socialism Minarchism Mutualism Natural-rights libertarianism Paleolibertarianism Panarchism Right-libertarianism Social anarchism Voluntaryism People Émile Armand Mikhail Bakunin Frédéric Bastiat Alexander Berkman Walter Block Murray Bookchin Kevin Carson Noam Chomsky Voltairine de Cleyre Joseph Déjacque Buenaventura Durruti Francesc Ferrer i Guàrdia Ricardo Flores Magón David D. Friedman Milton Friedman Luigi Galleani Henry George William Godwin Emma Goldman Paul Goodman (writer) Friedrich Hayek Henry Hazlitt Auberon Herbert Karl Hess Hans-Hermann Hoppe Stephan Kinsella Samuel Edward Konkin III Peter Kropotkin Étienne de La Boétie Gustav Landauer Rose Wilder Lane Roderick T. Long Tibor R. Machan Nestor Makhno Errico Malatesta Wendy McElroy Carl Menger Louise Michel John Stuart Mill Ludwig von Mises Gustave de Molinari Johann Most Albert Jay Nock Robert Nozick Isabel Paterson Ron Paul Francesc Pi i Margall Pierre-Joseph Proudhon Ayn Rand Rudolf Rocker Murray Rothbard Jean-Baptiste Say Herbert Spencer Lysander Spooner Max Stirner Henry David Thoreau Leo Tolstoy Benjamin Tucker Voline Josiah Warren Thomas Hodgskin Aspects Anarcho-capitalism and minarchism Criticisms Intellectual property Internal debates LGBT rights Objectivism Political parties Theories of law Related topics Austrian School of economics Civil libertarianism Civil societarianism Constitutionalism Libertarian conservatism Libertarian Democrat Libertarian Republican Libertarian science fiction Libertarian transhumanism Libertarianism in the United States Market liberalism Objectivism Public choice theory Small government Outline of libertarianism Libertarianism portal Liberalism portal v t e Julian Lincoln Simon (February 12, 1932 – February 8, 1998) was a professor of business administration at the University of Maryland and a Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute at the time of his death, after previously serving as a longtime economics and business professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Simon wrote many books and articles, mostly on economic subjects. He is best known for his work on population, natural resources, and immigration. His work covers cornucopian views on lasting economic benefits from natural resources and continuous population growth, even despite limited or finite physical resources, empowered by human ingenuity, substitutes, and technological progress. His works are also cited by libertarians against government regulation.[citation needed] He died at the age of 65 of a heart attack in Chevy Chase, Maryland. He is also known for the famous Simon–Ehrlich wager, a bet he made with ecologist Paul R. Ehrlich. Ehrlich bet that the prices for five metals would increase over a decade, while Simon took the opposite stance. Simon won the bet, as the prices for the metals sharply declined during that decade.

Read more on wikipedia.org

All quotes by Julian Lincoln Simon

Edit

photo Julian Lincoln Simon
Background photo by Giuliana