По поводу бесконечных споров между либертарианцами и "классическими" либералами:
Both moral and social philosophy are basically determined by whether one believes the individual, the organic group, or the dialogue between man and man to be of basic reality and value. For the radical individualist, both interpersonal relations and society can be nothing but the sum of separate individuals. For those who make society the basic reality, on the other hand, the individual is only a derivative reality and value. For these latter, also, the relations between individuals are essentially indirect, mediated through their common relationship to society. For the dialogical philosopher, however, both the individual and society exist as reality and value, but they are derived from the basic reality of the meeting between man and man. Thus for him the 'individual' and 'society' are abstractions which must not be taken as reality itself.[выделено мной]
-- Maurice S. Friedman, Martin Buber: The Life of Dialogue