Prometheus Unbound

Prometheus Unbound

A Libertarian Review of Speculative Fiction and Literature

  1. 03/27/2013

    PUP003 | Interview with Jeffrey Tucker

    In episode three of the Prometheus Unbound Podcast, Matthew and I have a fantastic interview with the wonderful Jeffrey Tucker, editor of Laissez Faire Books. It's a long one, about an hour and fifteen minutes, and we knew you'd be eager to listen to Jeffrey, so we wasted no time with chit-chat and got right down to business. We covered a number of topics ranging from LFB, intellectual property, and Jeffrey's favorite fiction. We started off by asking Jeffrey Tucker what it's been like working for a commercial publisher and bookseller after having worked for a nonprofit educational institution, the Ludwig von Mises Institute, where he was editorial vice president, for so long. Then we went on to talk about the business model of Laissez Faire Books and the role of the publisher in the digital age as a curator and service provider (curation as a service); the compatibility of open source and business; intellectual property; the nature of competition; how many entrepreneurs and businesses misidentify the source of their profitability and don't understand why people buy their goods or services; how copyright has held back the publishing industry; and markets as institutions of teaching and learning. “Don't work for my happiness, my brothers — show me yours — show me that it is possible — show me your achievement — and the knowledge will give me courage for mine.” — Ayn Rand We talked about a new book Jeffrey wrote with Doug French (as yet unpublished) titled Who's Going to Stop You, which was inspired by the important role played by Ayn Rand and her fiction in the libertarian movement. It's about what many still need to learn from her — an alternative to the typical libertarian activities of electioneering and bitter diatribes against the state on the one hand and academic-style educational efforts to promote liberty on the other — which is to set a positive example in expanding freedom and personal fulfillment in our own lives and the lives of others. We can't wait to see it. For the last 20-30 minutes, we discussed the power of fiction in presenting abstract ideas, how it grounds and concretizes them in human action. Jeffrey Tucker told us about his favorite works of fiction, four novels by Garet Garrett (listed below), and some of his future plans for Laissez Faire Books. To our great pleasure, those plans include publishing more out-of-print and original libertarian fiction like Rose Wilder Lane's Young Pioneers and John Hunt's Higher Cause. Follow Jeffrey Tucker LFB Google+ Twitter Facebook On Prometheus Unbound Books Mentioned Against Intellectual Property by Stephan Kinsella (Amazon / Free PDF) Against Intellectual Monopoly by Michele Boldrin and David K. Levine (Amazon / Free PDF) Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand (Audible / Amazon) Young Pioneers by Rose Wilder Lane (LFB Edition / Amazon) The Driver by Garet Garrett (LFB Edition on Amazon / LvMI Edition on Amazon) The Cinder Buggy by Garet Garrett (LvMI Edition on Amazon) Satan's Bushel by Garet Garrett (LvMI Edition on Amazon) Harangue by Garet Garrett (Amazon) Higher Cause by John Hunt (Amazon) A Beautiful Anarchy by Jeffrey Tucker (LFB Multimedia Ebook / Amazon)

    1h 20m
  2. 03/24/2013

    PUP002 | Libertarian Speculative Fiction

    In episode two of the Prometheus Unbound Podcast, Matthew and I (Geoffrey) discuss libertarian speculative fiction and introduce the Book of the Month, Today's Tomorrows Writing Prompt, and Fiction Forecasts segments of the show. We break the ice with some brief chit-chat about what we've been reading before seguing into our discussion of libertarian spec fic. The Book of the Month is Coyote by Allen Steele. In Today's Tomorrows Writing Prompt, we turn a speculative eye on the very real possibility of an intellectual-property dystopia. And in Fiction Forecasts, we talk about upcoming (at the time of recording) television shows, movies, and books. What We've Been Reading The Man Who Sold the Moon by Robert Heinlein (Amazon) The Human Division by John Scalzi (Audible / Amazon) Marsbound by Joe Haldeman — See Matthew's review Libertarian Speculative Fiction We covered a lot of ground in our discussion of libertarian spec fic, but we really only scratched the surface of this broad, deep, and no doubt controversial topic. I'm sure we'll be revisiting many of the stories and issues we covered, and many more besides, in future episodes. So subscribe and stay tuned! Here's a brief rundown of some of the things we covered: what qualifies a work of fiction as libertarian; libertarian themes in science fiction and fantasy; why they seem to be more common in science fiction and why libertarians seem to favor this genre; our favorite works of libertarian spec fic; the Prometheus Awards; and probably more that I'm forgetting as I write this. Authors & Books Mentioned Mistborn: The Final Empire by Brandon Sanderson (Audible / Amazon) Wizard's First Rule (The Sword of Truth series) by Terry Goodkind (Audible / Amazon) Revolutions by Stefan Molyneux (Amazon) Harald (Amazon) and Salamander (Amazon) by David Friedman Snuff by Terry Pratchett — See Matthew's review Anthem (Audible / Amazon), Atlas Shrugged (Audible / Amazon), and The Fountainhead (Audible / Amazon) by Ayn Rand The Blade Itself (The First Law trilogy) by Joe Abercrombie (Audible / Amazon) 1984 by George Orwell (Audible / Amazon) Little Brother, Makers, and For the Win by Cory Doctorow (links to my reviews)  The Star Fraction (The Fall Revolution) by Ken MacLeod (Audible / Amazon) Alongside Night by J. Neil Schulman — See Matthew's review The Probability Broach by L. Neil Smith (Amazon) The Shield That Fell From Heaven by William S. Kerr — See Matthew's review Book of the Month Coyote by Allen Steele Audible / Amazon Coyote marks a dramatic turn in the career of Allen Steele, Hugo Award–winning author of Chronospace. Epic in scope, passionate in its conviction, and set against a backdrop of plausible events, it tells the brilliant story of Earth's first interstellar colonists — and the mysterious planet that becomes their home. The crime of the century begins without a hitch. On July 5th, 2070, as it's about to be launched, the starship Alabama is hijacked — by her captain and crew. In defiance of the repressive government of The United Republic of Earth, they replace her handpicked passengers with political dissidents and their families. These become Earth's first pioneers in the exploration of space. After almost two-and-a-half centuries in cold sleep, they will awaken above their destination: a habitable world named Coyote. A planet that will test their strength, their beliefs, and their very humanity. In Coyote, Allen Steele delivers a grand novel of galactic adventure — a tale of life on the newest of frontiers. Get Coyote, or an audiobook of your choice, for free by signing up for a free 30-day trial membership at Audible.com. You can cancel at any time. Not only will you get a free audiobook, but you'll be helping to support the podcast as we will earn a generous commission. To start your free 30-day trial membership, go to http://audibletrial.com/prometheusunbound. Today’s Tomorrows Writing Prompt Matthew and I believe that intellectual “property” is a government grant of monopoly privilege — a form of economic protectionism — that can only be enforced by violating the property rights that people have in physical objects. Copyright and patents are the most prominent types of intellectual property (IP). They attempt to impose artificial scarcity in the realm of ideas, which are naturally not scarce. We see two countervailing trends with regard to IP in society, provoking each other in a kind of arms race. One is top-down, driven by certain protected classes,  the politically connected, politicians, bureaucrats, and corporations who fear competition and change. And it is tending toward ever more invasive, restrictive, draconian, and ridiculous laws and regulations. We expect this trend to continue and even accelerate at least over the near-term. DRM, crippled products, ridiculous patents, patent trolls, and jail time and huge fines for piracy are only the beginning. This trend brings increasing centralization of power and wealth, corporatism and intellectual feudalism, no-knock raids for piracy overtaking no-knock raids for drugs. The other trend is bottom-up, driven by a spirit of resistance and sharing and a love of openness and experimentation. This is the trend of rampant copying and remixing, of unbounded learning and innovation. It has spawned open source software, Creative Commons licenses, maker culture, torrenting, YouTube remixes, the digital self-publishing revolution, new models in online education like the Kahn Academy.  In reaction to the evils of government, it has led to advances in encryption (for privacy against government snooping), Bitcoin (for an encrypted, decentralized, independent currency), and 3D-printed weapons (which will eventually make gun control completely ineffective unless governments can lock down 3D printers). We focused on the top-down trend of tyranny, monopolistic control, and stasis in this episode and will focus on the bottom-up trend of resistance, openness, and experimentation in episode four. Writing Prompt As happened with the drug war, because there is no victim to denounce the crime, civil liberties must be infringed to control behavior. As a worst-case scenario, you could see resources coming under scrutiny and control to prevent breaking IP law. Paper, for instance, might require an ID to purchase. Even the disposal of paper might be controlled. As people tried to work around these controls, more and more resources might require more and more controls. Things probably won’t get this bad in real life, but it makes an interesting background for a sci-fi story, whether short story or novel. Citizens might be encouraged to spy on each other. If you see something, say something. Picture a young boy or girl who has just heard a poem that he or she likes. With so many resources having come under the control of the government, he takes the only way out left to him: he writes the poem in the sand. It’s an act of defiance and a way to have the poem handy when he wants to read it. What happens to him from there? Does he get in trouble for that? Are controls placed on sand? That's your writing prompt. Now go write. We'd love to see what you come up with, so we hope you will share your stories  with us and the rest of the Prometheus Unbound community. You can post your stories in our dedicated writing group forum (must be registered and logged in to view and post). And we'll be happy to give you our feedback. IP-Related Stories Mentioned “Melancholy Elephants” by Spider Robinson — See Matthew's review Emphyrio by Jack Vance (Amazon) The Golden Age by John C. Wright (Amazon) — imagine IP in the hands of immortals Recommended Reading on IP “The Case Against IP: A Concise Guide” by Stephan Kinsella Against Intellectual Property by Stephan Kinsella (Amazon / Free PDF) Fiction Forecasts My apologies for the two-month gap between episodes one and two. I don't really have a good excuse for it, but I will offer a brief explanation. They say every podcaster, at least when they start out, hates the sound of his or her own voice. Well, I don't think my voice sounds bad but I definitely am not the best public speaker. I'm working on it. That's actually one of the reasons why I launched this podcast. Anyway, I'm something of a perfectionist who doesn't like to do something if he can't do it right, so when it came to editing this episode I procrastinated. I've also been rather busy with family and paying work, but mostly it comes down to procrastination driven by the knowledge that this episode would not be as good as I want it to be. It's one thing to know on an intellectual level that it is more important to get something out there than that it be perfect, but it's another thing to internalize that piece of wisdom and get over the hurdle. Many a podcaster has looked back on his early episodes and cringed. I'm sure I'll be no different. With practice comes improvement. This segment of the episode is a bit dated, since it is now late March and Matthew and I are mainly discussing the tv shows, movies, and books that are coming up or returning in February. But the content really is timeless. These works of fiction are not going anywhere. I think you'll find our comments on them both interesting and amusing. And you still may discover some stories you hadn't heard of before. Television Returning shows: The Walking Dead Person of Interest Elementary Ongoing shows: Arrow Person of Interest Lost Girl Beauty and the Beast Once Upon A Time Elementary Castle Movies January: All Superheroes Must Die Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters John Dies at the End Gangster Squad February: Warm Bodies — Looks entertaining, but… is it the vanguard of a new sparkly zombies trend? The Sorcerer and the White Snake Side Effects — See Matthew's review Beautiful Creatures Escape From Planet Earth Dark Skies A Good Day to Die Hard Book

    1h 23m
  3. 01/24/2013

    PUP001 | Interview with Stephan Kinsella

    At long last, here is the first episode of our new, original podcast. First, Matthew and I break the ice by briefly talking about what we've been reading recently. I had just finished Kameron Hurley's debut novel God's War. Overall, I think it's a good effort with an interesting story and world-building but is not without its flaws. Matthew had recently finished Live Free or Die by John Ringo. It was a 2011 Prometheus Award finalist, not a winner as I mistakenly thought while recording the podcast and, according to Matthew, didn't deserve to be. Our interview with Stephan takes up most of the episode. It's around 53 minutes long and starts 9:40 minutes in. For those who don't already know him, Stephan Kinsella is a patent attorney and prominent libertarian legal scholar. He is best known for his opposition to intellectual property. We invited Stephan on the show to discuss the problems of intellectual property and piracy in the Digital Age. But first we had to ask him about his love of science fiction and fantasy. We got him to mention some of his favorite authors and books (see below for a list), and we even talked about the Hobbit movie for a bit. Then, at about 23:15 in, we dove into the meat of the interview. Stephan explained the historical origin of copyright (censorship) and patents (government grants of monopoly privilege, which is what copyright is now too really), how intellectual property has shaped and distorted the film and publishing industries, including Hollywood's move to California to avoid patent disputes, and why reform is not enough. We also discussed how the Digital Age — the age of the internet, smartphone, ereader, and globalization — is making the evils of copyright and patents more obvious and acute while at the same time undermining traditional business models built around intellectual property. And finally, we explore ways artistic creators might earn a living in a world without intellectual property laws. Stephan Kinsella, IP Man More about Stephan Kinsella and Intellectual Property StephanKinsella.com C4SIF.org (Stephan's Center for the Study of Innovative Freedom) “The Case Against IP: A Concise Guide,” Mises Daily Against Intellectual Property (Free in epub and pdf formats.) Google+: Stephan, C4SIF Twitter: NSKinsella, C4SIF Facebook: NSKinsella, C4SIF Authors and Books Recommended by Stephan Kinsella Marion Zimmer Bradley, The Mists of Avalon Stephen R. Donaldson, The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant (the first novel in the series is Lord Foul's Bane) J.R.R. Tolkien, The Hobbit; The Lord of the Rings Vernor Vinge, A Fire Upon the Deep; A Deepness in the Sky; The Children of the Sky Dan Simmons, Hyperion Orson Scott Card, Ender's Game Robert A. Heinlein, The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress; To Sail Beyond the Sunset; Starship Troopers; Time Enough for Love J. Neil Schulman, Alongside Night Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged; The Fountainhead; Anthem L. Neil Smith, The Probability Broach (also a graphic novel); The Gallatin Divergence Yevgeny Zamyatin, We Robert James Bidinotto, Hunter

    1h 5m
  4. 12/28/2012

    THE LIBERTARIAN TRADITION PODCAST | Yevgeny Zamyatin: Libertarian Novelist

    In this episode of the Libertarian Tradition podcast series, part of the Mises Institute's online media library, Jeff Riggenbach makes the case that Yevgeny Zamyatin's dystopian science fiction novel, We, belongs in the libertarian tradition. You can also read the transcript below: When we think of the libertarian tradition, we tend naturally to think of political philosophers and economists of the past. But surely one part of the libertarian tradition belongs to novelists and other fiction writers. In earlier podcasts in this series, I've already discussed two such figures: Ayn Rand, whose 1957 novel, Atlas Shrugged, is, arguably, one of the half-dozen most important libertarian works of the 20th century, and John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, the professor of philology at Oxford whose giant fantasy novel, The Lord of the Rings, published just a few years before Atlas Shrugged, is arguably the most culturally influential single novel published in English in the 20th century. This week, I'd like to talk about a writer whose level of influence has been much more modest, but whose indirect influence has nevertheless been considerable. Regular listeners to this series know what I mean by indirect influence. I gave an example of it just last week, when I discussed the life and career of Isabel Paterson. Paterson's libertarian classic, The God of the Machine, has never reached a wide readership, but, thanks to the effort of her protégé, Ayn Rand, Paterson herself has influenced millions of readers who have never even seen a copy of The God of the Machine. The writer I'm talking about today wrote a novel in which a citizen of a totalitarian state of the future meets a woman and becomes obsessed with her. He begins a forbidden sexual affair with this woman, meeting with her illicitly in a very old part of the city where the intrusive gaze of the all-encompassing government doesn't seem to penetrate. Through his relationship with her, he becomes involved in the organized underground opposition to the all-encompassing government — an opposition he had never previously realized existed at all. Ultimately, he and the woman are caught, imprisoned, and tortured. In the end, he is sincerely repentant of his crimes and is completely devoted to the all-encompassing government that has done him all this harm. A familiar story, no? Can you tell me what novel I've just described? Ah, I see a hand in the back of the room. Yes? “George Orwell's 1984,” you cry out confidently. And your answer is correct, but only as far as it goes, which is, perhaps, not quite as far as you thought it would. That is a description of the plot of 1984, which was published, as we all know, in 1949. But Orwell adapted the plot of 1984 from another novel, one originally published 25 years earlier in 1924. That earlier novel was entitled, simply, We. It was the work of a not-very-well-known Russian writer, Yevgeny Zamyatin. Zamyatin was not very well known outside Russia when We was first published, and he was still not very well known in the West 25 years later, when Orwell published 1984. He remains not very well known in the West to this day. Nineteen Eighty-Four, by contrast, is extremely well known in the West today, particularly in England and the United States, where words and phrases like “Newspeak,” “doublethink,” “thoughtcrime,” and “Big Brother Is Watching You” are familiar to millions who have never read the novel from which they come. And there is no getting around the similarities between 1984 and Zamyatin's We. The leader of the totalitarian state is called “The Benefactor” instead of “Big Brother,” but the basic events of the story are fundamentally the same. And we know that George Orwell did read We several years before he wrote 1984. As Natasha Randall, the translator of the current Modern Library edition of Zamyatin's novel, told an interviewer for New York City public radio station WNYC in 2006, Orwell made no secret of his admiration for We. Randall explains, Orwell certainly read it. Actually, he read it I think in the early '40s, so about 8 years before he wrote his 1984. He had said that it was a great inspiration to him in writing 1984. Orwell also said that he thinks that Huxley was lying when he said he hadn't read it, because Huxley did maintain that he'd never read We, though of the two — Brave New World and 1984— Brave New World is very similar in lots of ways. Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, first published in 1932, is extremely similar to We in a number of ways. Here's one: the World State in Brave New World is a technocratic one, dedicated to industrial efficiency and mass production. In the words of one critic, The World State is built upon the principles of Henry Ford's assembly line — mass production, homogeneity, predictability, and consumption of disposable consumer goods. At the same time as the World State lacks any supernatural-based religions, Ford himself is revered as a deity, and characters celebrate Ford Day and swear oaths by his name (e.g., “By Ford!”). The World State calendar numbers years in the “AF” era — “After Ford” — with year 1 AF being equivalent to 1908 AD, the year in which Ford's first Model T rolled off of his assembly line. In Zamyatin's We, industrial efficiency and mass production are the bywords of life in the technocratic One State. The narrator and main character of Zamyatin's story, the engineer D-503, tells us that “unquestionably the greatest genius of the ancients” was Frederick Winslow Taylor, the original factory and office “efficiency expert,” who invented time-and-motion studies and took pride in increasing the output of any workplace through what he called “scientific management.” Taylor's only fault, according to D-503, was that “his thought did not reach far enough to extend his method to all of life, to every step, to the twenty-four hours of every day.” Another example: in Huxley's World State, sex is freely available and is, in fact, encouraged. But it is far from the monogamous sex we still regard as the norm in our own society. A popular slogan in the World State is: “everyone belongs to everyone else.” This is repeated incessantly, the formation of families is discouraged, marriage is regarded as antisocial, and, as one perceptive critic of Brave New World describes it, both “sexual competition and emotional, romantic relationships are obsolete.” In the One State of Zamyatin's We, first described in print eight years before Brave New World, things are remarkably similar. “Everyone belongs to everyone else.” If you want to have sex with someone, all you have to do is register for that person with the One State, and that person will show up at your room at a prearranged time with a pink ticket for you to tear in half before you get down to business. You'll have 30 minutes to take care of business, and you'll find that any kind of privacy is in pretty short supply. Here is how translator Natasha Randall described the physical appearance of the One State in that 2006 WNYC interview: The world he creates in We is very clean and very blue. And it's an urban state, where essentially all of mankind has been driven inside of one great big green wall. And all of nature is banished to the outside of those walls, so you won't find a flower or an animal within this green wall. And all the buildings in the One State — which is this urban state — are transparent, so one of the nicest lines in the book describes looking up at these transparent buildings where you'll see people walking on the 20th floor and it looks as though they're swimming, because there's no floor beneath them. As D-503 puts it, “we live in full view, perpetually awash with light, in among our transparent walls, woven from the sparkling air. We have nothing to hide from one another.” Even the citizens of the One State, however, do feel the need for a little privacy on occasion. As Natasha Randall notes, in Zamyatin's novel, There are actually times when individuals are allowed to lower blinds in their rooms. And that's when someone arrives with a pink ticket. So we know Orwell read and admired We before he wrote 1984, and we don't know for sure whether Huxley read it before writing Brave New World, but it seems likely. We also don't know for sure whether Ayn Rand read Zamyatin's novel before writing her own story of totalitarianism in the far future, Anthem, which was first published in 1938, fourteen years after the first publication of We. (Rand revised Anthem slightly a few years later for the second edition, which appeared in 1946.) Did she read We before 1938? In an excellent article, “Zamyatin and Rand,” published in 2003 in the Journal of Ayn Rand Studies and now available online, Peter Saint-Andre argues that Zamyatin's We was “quite likely” a formative influence on Ayn Rand. He points out that We was completed in 1921, the same year Rand entered the University of Petrograd as a student of history, philosophy, and literature. Rand's college years, 1921–1924, were, as Saint-Andre notes, “the years of Zamyatin's greatest fame and influence” in Petrograd. “He was at that time,” Saint-Andre writes, a hero to writers young and old, admired for his fierce independence and literary individualism, for he was virtually the only literary figure in Russia to voice his resistance to collectivism and conformity. Zamyatin was in those years a highly public literary and philosophical presence in Petersburg, and it is quite possible that Rand read some of his stories and essays … [or] attended one of his many public lectures. “It also seems probable,” Saint-Andre continues, “that Rand read Zamyatin's We in the English translation by Gregory Zilboorg published in 1924, for in a 1934 letter to her agent regarding the ma

    20 min
  5. 12/17/2012

    THE LIBERTARIAN TRADITION PODCAST | J.R.R. Tolkien as Libertarian

    In this episode of the Libertarian Tradition podcast series, part of the Mises Institute's online media library, Jeff Riggenbach makes the case that the author of The Lord of the Rings, J.R.R. Tolkien, can be counted as a libertarian. Editor's Note: A transcript is unavailable. This early episode was never turned into a Mises Daily article like most of the others. Here is a brief summary, however: Riggenbach argues that The Lord of the Rings is “both an allegory of the inevitable fate that waits for all attempts to defeat evil power by power and an allegory of power exerted for domination.” The story is a dramatization of Lord Acton's famous dictum that “power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” After a delving deeper into Lord Acton and his dictum, Riggenbach reads a couple of passages from one of Tolkien's letters to his son, Christopher, that were also quoted by Alberto Mingardi and Carlo Stagnaro in their Mises Daily article, “Tolkien v. Power” (February 21, 2002). I quote the passages below for your convenience, but the whole article is well worth reading: My political opinions lean more and more to Anarchy (philosophically understood, meaning abolition of control not whiskered men with bombs) — or to ‘unconstitutional' Monarchy. I would arrest anybody who uses the word state (in any sense other than the inanimate realm of England and its inhabitants, a thing that has neither power, rights nor mind); and after a chance of recantation, execute them if they remained obstinate! (The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien, 1995, p. 63; see NYT Review.) The proper study of Man is anything but Man; and the most improper job of any man, even saints (who at any rate were at least unwilling to take it on), is bossing other men. Not one in a million is fit to it, and least of all those who seek the opportunity. (The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien, 1995, p. 64) Another relevant quote from Tolkien's letters that Riggenbach doesn't recite is this: If we could get back to personal names, it would do a lot of good. Government is an abstract noun meaning the art and the process of governing and it should be an offence to write it with a capital G or so as to refer to people. If people were in the habit of referring to ‘King George's council, Winston and his gang,' it would do a long way to clearing thought, and reducing the frightful landslide into Theyocracy. (The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien, 1995, p. 63) Riggenbach also relates Tolkien's description of the Shire as having hardly any government. Finally, he points to Aragorn's reluctance to be king and Tolkien's belief that such a man, a man who does not want power, would make a good king. This last, I think, must be understood in light of Tolkien's second-best preference for unconstitutional monarchy and his belief that not one man in a million is fit to rule other men. One can't very well design a political system around such a rare occurrence.

    17 min

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A Libertarian Review of Speculative Fiction and Literature