Paris, France: Editions la découverte, Paris (
2002)
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Abstract
This book describes the philosophical principles underlying the doctrine (the political project) often called “classical liberalism”. By this expression we mean, in this book, the project for society proposed, during the second half of the eighteenth century, by David Hume and Adam Smith in Great Britain, Turgot and Condorcet in France, Thomas Jefferson in the United States and Kant and Humboldt in Germany. The differences between the principles of “classical liberalism” and those of the extreme doctrines of Milton Friedman and Friedrich Hayek (often confused with 'classical liberalism') are clearly explained.
This book has been translated into Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Vietnamese, Rumanian and Turkish.
Several scholars have done me the honor of posting a .pdf version of this work (which is no longer available in paper form). Here are three excellent versions that are easily found :
"Les fondements philosophiques du libéralisme jugurtha noblogs" (224 pages),
"Les fondements philosophiques du libéralisme" (224 pages), in ZLibrary.
"Les fondements philosophiques du libéralisme abdelmagidzarrouki" (224 pages),