A radical thinker who justified liberalism through argumentation ethics.
Hans-Hermann Hoppe (1949- ) is a German-born economist and political philosopher who has justified private property rights and liberalism a priori through argumentation ethics. As a student and intellectual heir of Rothbard, he occupies a unique position in contemporary liberal thought through his radical critique of democracy and his social theory grounded in a private property order.
Hoppe's works are controversial, but both his supporters and critics acknowledge the logical rigor of his arguments.
Hoppe was born in 1949 in Peine, West Germany. He studied philosophy, sociology, and economics at Saarland University, Goethe University (Frankfurt), and the University of Michigan. While at Frankfurt, he earned his doctoral degree under Jürgen Habermas.
This is a noteworthy intellectual background. Habermas is a leading figure of the Frankfurt School and a master of left-wing social theory. Hoppe drew inspiration from Habermas's discourse ethics, but applied it to reach the opposite conclusions - namely, the justification of private property and the illegitimacy of the state. He defended liberalism with a tool from the left.
In 1986, Hoppe immigrated to the United States and served as a professor of economics at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV). Meeting Rothbard at the same university formed a decisive intellectual alliance. Rothbard described Hoppe's argumentation ethics as "the most interesting justification of liberalism."
After retiring from the university in 2006, he moved through Turkey and now resides in Istanbul, where he founded the Property and Freedom Society and hosts annual academic conferences.
This is Hoppe's most original contribution. The core argument proceeds as follows:
Premise: Consider the very act of argumentation itself - discussing what norms are justified. What do the two people engaged in argumentation presuppose?
Therefore: Any norm that denies private property rights contradicts argumentation itself. Private property rights are the only justifiable norms.
The core strength of this argument is that it is a priori. It does not depend on empirical data or subjective value judgments, but derives directly from the logical structure of the activity of argumentation.
Hoppe's most controversial work is Democracy: The God That Failed (2001).
Hoppe compares democracy and monarchy from the perspective of protecting private property. The core argument:
A monarch (king) regards the state as his own private property. Therefore, he has an incentive to preserve the value of the state (its capital value) in the long term. Since the king will pass the state to his descendants, excessive expropriation would diminish the value of his property.
A democratic ruler (president, congressman) merely leases the state temporarily. Once his term ends, he must leave, so he has no incentive to preserve capital value. Instead, he has an incentive to extract (expropriate) as much as possible during his term. This is the structural reason for endless increases in government spending and debt under democracy.
Hoppe is not defending monarchy in this comparison. His conclusion is that any form of state violates private property, and the true alternative is a private property order, that is, a stateless society.
Hoppe extends time preference theory into a theory of civilization. Low time preference - the tendency to forego present satisfaction for the future - enables saving, investment, and long-term planning, and is the foundation of civilizational development.
According to Hoppe, the state (particularly the democratic state) artificially increases time preference:
Civilizational decline is a consequence of high time preference, and state expansion is its cause.
The alternative social order presented by Hoppe is a private law society. In this society:
Insurance companies play a crucial role in this vision. They have economic interest in protecting their customers' property, and thus have incentives to invest efficiently in crime prevention and dispute resolution.
Founded by Hoppe in 2006, this society hosts annual academic conferences in Bodrum, Turkey. Libertarian scholars, economists, and philosophers from around the world gather to conduct scholarly discussions on the state, property rights, and freedom, aiming to provide a free intellectual space removed from censorship and self-censorship in mainstream academia.
"In a free society, there is no 'right' to immigration. There is only the invitation of private property owners."
"No institution in human history has destroyed private property as efficiently as democracy."
"Taxation is robbery, and tax collectors are robbers. Whether they are elected by vote does not change this fact."
"The state is a compulsory territorial monopolist. It is an institution that maintains a monopoly on the role of ultimate arbiter of violence within a given territory."
Hoppe's thought connects naturally with Bitcoin: