John Hospers: Difference between revisions

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'''John Hospers''' ([[June 9]], [[1918]] - ), was the first [[Libertarian]] to run for the office of [[President of the United States]] in [[1972]]. A friend of [[Ayn Rand]] since [[1971]], he published his treatise on Libertarian philosophy entitled "Libertarianism: A Political Philosophy for Tomorrow" in 1971, and secured the party nomination for president, along with [[Tonie Nathan|Theodora "Tonie" Nathan]] in 1972. On the ballot in only two states and garnering just over 3000 popular votes, the pair made history when elector [[Roger MacBride]] of [[Minnesota]] cast his vote for the ticket of Hospers and Nathan, rather than the Republican candidate and eventual winner, Richard Nixon. This made Ms. Nathan the first woman in US history to receive an electoral vote, preceding Geraldine Ferrarro by a dozen years.
'''John Hospers''' (9 June [[1918]] - 12 June [[2011]]), an academic philosopher, was the first [[Libertarian]] nominee for the office of [[President of the United States]].  
 
 
A friend of [[Ayn Rand]] since [[1971]], he published his treatise on Libertarian philosophy entitled "Libertarianism: A Political Philosophy for Tomorrow" in 1971, and secured the party nomination for president, along with [[Tonie Nathan|Theodora "Tonie" Nathan]] in [[1972]]. On the ballot in only two states and garnering just over 3000 popular votes, the pair made history when elector [[Roger MacBride]] of [[Minnesota]] cast his vote for the ticket of Hospers and Nathan, rather than the Republican candidate and eventual winner, Richard Nixon. This made Ms. Nathan the first woman in US history to receive an electoral vote, preceding Geraldine Ferrarro by a dozen years.
After his presidential bid, Hospers returned to teach philosophy at the University of Southern California, where he taught until his retirement in [[1988]].
After his presidential bid, Hospers returned to teach philosophy at the University of Southern California, where he taught until his retirement in [[1988]].
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==Statement of Principles==
[[Image:John Hospers Original Statement of Principles.png|128px|thumb|Original typed draft of the Statement of Principles]]
At the [[1972 Libertarian National Convention]], Hospers was asked to write a [[The Statement of Principles|statement of principles]] by [[David Nolan]]. After some minor modifications, it passed unanimously.
==Books==
* ''Meaning and Truth in the Arts''
* ''Introductory Readings in Aesthetics''
* ''Artistic Expression''
* [[Libertarianism: a political philosophy for tomorrow]]
* ''Understanding the Arts''
* [[Law and the Market]]
* ''Introduction to Philosophical Analysis''
* '' Human Conduct''
==Publications==
* [[The Personalist]] (editor, 1968–1982)
* [[The Monetist]] (editor, 1982-1992)
* Liberty (Editor?)


==Election results==
==Election results==

Revision as of 04:53, 14 June 2011

John Hospers (9 June 1918 - 12 June 2011), an academic philosopher, was the first Libertarian nominee for the office of President of the United States.


A friend of Ayn Rand since 1971, he published his treatise on Libertarian philosophy entitled "Libertarianism: A Political Philosophy for Tomorrow" in 1971, and secured the party nomination for president, along with Theodora "Tonie" Nathan in 1972. On the ballot in only two states and garnering just over 3000 popular votes, the pair made history when elector Roger MacBride of Minnesota cast his vote for the ticket of Hospers and Nathan, rather than the Republican candidate and eventual winner, Richard Nixon. This made Ms. Nathan the first woman in US history to receive an electoral vote, preceding Geraldine Ferrarro by a dozen years. After his presidential bid, Hospers returned to teach philosophy at the University of Southern California, where he taught until his retirement in 1988.

Statement of Principles

Original typed draft of the Statement of Principles

At the 1972 Libertarian National Convention, Hospers was asked to write a statement of principles by David Nolan. After some minor modifications, it passed unanimously.

Books

Publications


Election results

Election results as a Libertarian candidate
Year Office Vote total %
1972 President of the United States 3,676 0.00%


Preceded by:
-
Libertarian Party Presidential candidate
1972
Succeeded by:
Roger MacBride