As it so happens, I was expecting a long sojourn from civilization into the farmland abyss which is my parents' home. It is the holiday's, after all, and you should visit your folks, even if that means utter isolation and being quartered in by about 40 cm's of snow. So I stocked up on books, including Sciabarra's, for those moments when political conversation with my parents and sister got stale. The gems in this particular book left me half breathless and more than eager to open the dialogue on politics with anyone and everyone.
Total Freedom: Toward a Dialectical Libertarianism is a stunning accomplishment on the part of this young, prolific and fascinating author. It's depth and scholarship is hardly matched and, for those who choose to take up this challenge (and it is a challenge), the rewards are there for the taking.
Sciabarra's project in this book can be seen as two-fold: the first part of the book explores the history of dialectics from figures like Plato and Aristotle, to Hegel and Kierkegaard, while the second part focuses on the use of dialectics within libertarian philosophy using Murray Rothbard as the perennial backdrop. Implicit throughout the book is Sciabarra's desire to shift the methodological orientation of libertarians and others toward the use of dialectics. Indeed, the 'ability to make interconnections amongst seemingly disparate things within a context' (a loose definition of dialectics), is precisely the task Sciabarra sets out for future scholars.
The topic itself is unbearably difficult. I had an incredibly difficult time getting through the first part with satisfactory understanding, reading and re-reading certain sections which simply escaped immediate comprehension. Sciabarra insists to also place an inordinate amount of footnotes on each page. This made me feel like he was slipping another book under my unsuspecting nose, while I flittered back and forth between footnote and the text.
This having been said, the excitement of finally grasping (I think...) the content of the first part, and being led through the awe-inspiring 'radical' anarcho-capitalist philosophy of Murray Rothbard left me with a smile on my face from ear to ear. This is a marvelous book, rife with complexity, richness, and scholarly integrity--an accomplishment the author should be proud of.
Total Freedom, concluding his trilogy, is a must read for anyone seriously concerned with negative liberty. If that's you, and I hope it is, then snatch it up.