Authors > Ralph Raico

Ralph Raico Quotes

Liberalism is, in fact, the ideology of the capitalist revolution that prodigiously raised the living standards of the mass of people; a doctrine gradually elaborated over several centuries, which offered a new concept of social order, encompassing freedom in the only form suited to the modern world. Step by step, in practice and theory, the various sectors of human activity were withdrawn from the jurisdiction of coercive authority and given over to the voluntary action of self-regulating society.
Source: Eugen Richter and the End of German Liberalism (1990) [link] #122
Libertarians are not "against" tradition. But we make certain elementary distinctions ... starting with the distinction between the traditions that mankind has voluntarily generated and preserved, and those stemming from coercion, violence, and force ... it is time they stopped talking as if all the good and great traditions that are our rightful inheritance were somehow to be credited to the state, and to themselves as the state's apologists, rather than to their true source -- the women and men who, with what freedom they had, created, sifted, refined, and transmitted those traditions through the generations.
Source: The Trouble With Conservatives (1980) [link] #232

About Ralph Raico

(From Wikipedia)
Ralph Raico

Ralph Raico (October 23, 1936 — December 13, 2016) was an American libertarian historian of European liberalism and a professor of history at Buffalo State College.

Raico was from New York City, where he attended The Bronx High School of Science. Through the Foundation for Economic Education, Raico and his classmate George Reisman arranged to meet with economist Ludwig von Mises, who subsequently invited them to attend his graduate seminar on Austrian economics at the New York University. There, he met fellow seminar attendee Murray Rothbard, who befriended him. Rothbard and his friends Raico, Reisman, Ronald Hamowy and Robert Hessen formed a "self-conscious intellectual and activist salon" they named the Circle Bastiat.

In the mid-1950s, the Circle Bastiat also brought Raico into contact with novelist Ayn Rand and her followers, informally known at the time as The Collective. Raico attended the first lectures about Rand's philosophy of Objectivism. Eventually, relations between the two groups soured, leading to an incident in which the Circle parodied the Collective, performing a skit in which Raico played the part of Rand's protege Nathaniel Branden. By the summer of 1958, Rand and Rothbard had broken off all ties, and the groups stopped associating.

Raico received his B.A. from the City College of New York and his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago, where his adviser was Friedrich Hayek.

While at the University of Chicago, Raico founded The New Individualist Review, a libertarian publication which first published in April 1961 and produced 17 issues until it ceased publication in 1968. Raico and other graduate students comprised the editorial board. Hayek and Milton Friedman and later economist George Stigler were on the advisory board. In 1981, Friedman wrote that he believed the publication had "set an intellectual standard which has not yet, I believe, been matched by any of the more recent publications in the same philosophical tradition".

Raico later became senior editor of Inquiry magazine. He was an associate editor of The Independent Review (a journal published by The Independent Institute) and a senior fellow of the Mises Institute which published his work on the history of liberty and the connection between war and the state. Raico translated Mises' book Liberalismus and various essays by Friedrich Hayek into English.

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