ContributorsIntroductionDavid SchmidtzCarmen E. PavelPART I CONCEPTUAL FRAMES1 Self-Ownership as a Form of OwnershipDaniel C. Russell2 Positive Freedom and the General WillPiper L. BringhurstGerald Gaus3 Moralized Conceptions of LibertyRalf M. Bader4 On the Conflict Between Liberty and EqualityHillel Steiner5 Freedom and EqualityElizabeth Anderson6 Non-DominationFrank Lovett7 The Point of Self-OwnershipDavid SobelPART II HISTORICAL VIEWS8 Platonic FreedomFred D. Miller Jr.9 Aristotelian FreedomDavid Keyt10 Freedom in the Scholastic TraditionEdward Feser11 Freedom, Slavery, and Identity in Renaissance Florence: The Faces of Leon Battista AlbertiOrlando Patterson12 Freedom and EnlightenmentRyan Patrick Hanley13 Adam Smiths Libertarian PaternalismJames R. OttesonPART III INSTITUTIONAL PREREQUISITES OF FREEDOM14 Market Failure, the Tragedy of the Commons, and Default Libertarianism in Contemporary Economics and PolicyMark Bryant Budolfson15 Planning, Freedom, and the Rule of LawSteven Wall16 Freedom, Regulation, and Public PolicyMark Pennington17 Boundaries, Subjection to Laws, and Affected InterestsCarmen E. Pavel18 Democracy and FreedomJason Brennan19 Can Constitutions Limit Government?Michael HuemerPART IV CULTURE, DIVERSITY, EXPECTATIONS20 Freedom and ReligionRichard J. Arneson21 Freedom and Influence in Formative EducationKyla Ebels-Duggan22 Freedom and the (Posthumous) Harm PrincipleDavid BooninPART V ECONOMIES AND NORMATIVE TRADEOFFS23 Exploitation and FreedomMatt Zwolinski24 Voluntariness, Coercion, Self-ownershipSerena Olsaretti25 The Impartial Spectator and the Moral Teachings of MarketsVirgil Henry StorrPART VI BODY AND MIND26 Disciplinary Specialization and Thinking for YourselfElijah Millgram27 Free Will as a Psychological AccomplishmentEddy Nahmias28 Prisoners of Misbelief: The Epistemic Conditions of FreedomAllen BuchananIndex