LewRockwell.com
 
 
This article is excerpted from the first chapter of For a New  Liberty: The 
Libertarian Manifesto. An audiobook version of this chapter,  read by Jeff 
Riggenbach, including a new introduction, written and read by  Llewellyn H. 
Rockwell, Jr., ...
 
The  Libertarian Heritage: The American Revolution and  Classical Liberalism

by _Murray N.  Rothbard_ 
(http://www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/rothbard-lib.html) 


Relevant passage which connects Spencer and Social Darwinism  :
 
 
 
...[a new]  change in the ideology of classical liberals came during  the 
late nineteenth century, when, at least for a few decades, they adopted the  
doctrines of social evolutionism, often called "social Darwinism." 
Generally,  statist historians have smeared such social Darwinist laissez-faire 
liberals as  Herbert Spencer and William Graham Sumner as cruel champions of 
the  
extermination, or at least of the disappearance, of the socially "unfit." 
Much  of this was simply the dressing up of sound economic and sociological  
free-market doctrine in the then-fashionable trappings of evolutionism. But 
the  really important and crippling aspect of their social Darwinism was the 
 illegitimate carrying-over to the social sphere of the view that species 
(or  later, genes) change very, very slowly, after millennia of time. The 
social  Darwinist liberal came, then, to abandon the very idea of revolution or 
radical  change in favor of sitting back and waiting for the inevitable 
tiny evolutionary  changes over eons of time. In short, ignoring the fact that 
liberalism had had  to break through the power of ruling elites by a series 
of radical changes and  revolutions, the social Darwinists became 
conservatives preaching against any  radical measures and in favor of only the 
most 
minutely gradual of  changes.
 
 
In fact, the great  libertarian Spencer himself is a fascinating 
illustration of just such a change  in classical liberalism (and his case is 
paralleled in America by William Graham  Sumner). In a sense, Herbert Spencer 
embodies within himself much of the decline  of liberalism in the nineteenth 
century. For Spencer began as a magnificently  radical liberal, as virtually a 
pure libertarian. But, as the virus of sociology  and social Darwinism took 
over in his soul, Spencer abandoned libertarianism as  a dynamic, radical 
historical movement, although without abandoning it in pure  theory. While 
looking forward to an eventual victory of pure liberty, of  "contract" as 
against 
"status," of industry as against militarism, Spencer began  to see that 
victory as inevitable, but only after millennia of gradual  evolution. Hence, 
Spencer abandoned liberalism as a fighting, radical creed and  confined his 
liberalism in practice to a weary, conservative, rearguard action  against the 
growing collectivism and statism of his  day....

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