Appreciative of the broadness here, but I take trust in the readership here to recommend interestingly.
I’m looking for an introductory book on non-democratic political systems. I’d be particularly interested in a book that argues some of the core issues in democracy, and proposes alternative solutions.
I often find myself critical of democratic systems (“we shouldn’t be voting, I don’t trust these people”), but have little arguing power to the alternatives when needed. Often hear neoreactionary / anarchism thrown around, but I’d actually like to ready beyond a wikipedia article.
Moldbug is generally the best neoreactionary to read imho. Google moldbuggery to find a site that indexes his output in a more navigatable version than the original blog.
Obviously this isn’t a book, per se, but his ‘gentle introduction’ sized threads are novella sized at least.
Appreciative of the broadness here, but I take trust in the readership here to recommend interestingly.
I’m looking for an introductory book on non-democratic political systems. I’d be particularly interested in a book that argues some of the core issues in democracy, and proposes alternative solutions.
I often find myself critical of democratic systems (“we shouldn’t be voting, I don’t trust these people”), but have little arguing power to the alternatives when needed. Often hear neoreactionary / anarchism thrown around, but I’d actually like to ready beyond a wikipedia article.
Thoughts?
For anarcho-capitalism, The Machinery of Freedom by SSC commenter David Friedman.
Moldbug is generally the best neoreactionary to read imho. Google moldbuggery to find a site that indexes his output in a more navigatable version than the original blog.
Obviously this isn’t a book, per se, but his ‘gentle introduction’ sized threads are novella sized at least.
See Seasteading. No good book on it yet, but one will be published in March (by Joe Quirk and LWer Patri Friedman).
Thomas Hobbes’ Leviathan is a classic book that argues for monarchy against aristocracy and democracy.