Robert Lee Hale has long been an intellectual thorn in the side of the defenders of laissez faire, among whom I am quite happy to count myself. As Barbara Fried notes in her meticulous study of Hale\u27s work, his name is hardly a household word. But both directly and indirectly, his influence continues to be great. His best known work is perhaps Coercion and Distribution in a Supposedly Non-Coercive State, published in 1923 as a review of Thomas Nixon Carver\u27s Principles of National Economy, itself a defense of the classical principles of laissez faire, remembered today only for the drubbing that it took at Hale\u27s hands. Hale also wrote one of the early influential treatments of the problem of unconstitutional conditions, which add...