Source: Libertarian Institute
by Alan Mosley
“Born on November 16, 1938 in Brooklyn, Robert Nozick began his intellectual life as a young socialist but ended it as one of the twentieth century’s fiercest defenders of property rights and limited government. Raised in a Jewish immigrant household, he joined Norman Thomas’s Socialist Party youth wing and helped organize the Student League for Industrial Democracy, yet his curiosity soon led him beyond doctrinaire leftism. While studying at Columbia and later Princeton, he encountered thinkers such as Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, Milton Friedman, Murray Rothbard, and Ayn Rand, whose arguments for self‑ownership and free markets challenged his egalitarian assumptions. In the preface to his most famous book, he recalled that a long conversation with Rothbard ‘stimulated my interest in individualist anarchist theory’ and began a process that changed his mind.” (11/17/25)