RIP: David F.
Nolan, inspiration for the World's Smallest Political Quiz and
co-founder of the Libertarian Party, dead at 66.
Dear friend of liberty,
The Advocates for Self-Government is deeply saddened to
report
that David F. Nolan, creator of the Nolan Chart that is the basis
of the World's Smallest Political Quiz, has passed away.
Nolan died on November 21, just two days before his 67th birthday.
He lived in Tucson, Arizona.
Nolan is famous among libertarians for two major accomplishments.
He was a principal founder of the Libertarian Party -- in fact,
that party was formed in his own living room in 1971.
And in 1970, he created a new multi-spectrum map of the political
world that is rapidly replacing the old-fashioned left-versus-right
linear model. His model is today known internationally as the
"Nolan Chart."
The Nolan Chart forms the basis of the Advocates for
Self-Government's world-famous World's Smallest Political Quiz. The
Quiz took Nolan's chart to a vast, worldwide audience. The Quiz has
been taken over 16 million times online, is referenced in numerous
major textbooks, is used in countless high school and college
classrooms, and has been reprinted in numerous newspapers,
magazines, books, and other media. The Quiz has been translated
into several languages. Through the success of the Quiz, the Nolan
Chart model has won acceptance among political scientists and has
changed the political thinking of countless individuals.
"The libertarian movement has lost one of its giants, and I have
lost a dear colleague and friend," said Advocates president Sharon
Harris. "David Nolan changed political history and changed the way
millions look at the world of politics. It is impossible to
overstate the importance of his legacy to liberty."
Nolan was an enthusiastic supporter of the Advocates for
Self-Government, speaking at Advocates events, serving on the
Advocates Board of Advisors, and publicly endorsing the Advocates
and the World's Smallest Political Quiz.
Nolan credited the Advocates with rescuing and popularizing his
Nolan Chart.
Nolan introduced his chart in an article he wrote in the summer of
1970 entitled "Classifying and Analyzing Political-Economic
Systems." It appeared in the January 1971 issue of The
Individualist, a newsletter published by the Society for Individual
Liberty.
The idea generated some interest, but, as Nolan later told the
Advocates in an interview, "the discussion died down... the idea
didn't completely disappear, but it drifted into a kind of
semi-obscurity for several years."
That obscurity ended abruptly, Nolan said, when Advocates Founder
Marshall Fritz -- searching for new, effective ways to communicate
libertarian ideas -- became excited by the Nolan Chart's
possibilities in the early 1980s. Marshall tweaked the chart and
added ten questions alongside it, allowing users to place
themselves on the chart by their answers.
The result was the World's Smallest Political Quiz -- arguably the
most successful outreach and educational tool in the libertarian
movement's history.
"Marshall essentially resurrected the Chart," Nolan said.
"Marshall saw its value as a recruiting and promotional and
mind-changing tool more clearly than anybody else ever had, perhaps
even more than I had.
"Marshall dusted it off, refined it, fine-tuned it, and started
promoting it. And thanks to Marshall's efforts, it took off."
Nolan's long history of libertarian political activism and
leadership dated back to the early days of the modern libertarian
movement. He credited Robert Heinlein and Ayn Rand as key
influences on his political thinking. His activism started with the
Goldwater for President campaign, and continued with organizations
including Young Americans for Freedom, the Liberty Amendment
Committee, and the Society for Individual Liberty, before the
formation of the Libertarian Party.
Nolan remained active in the two organizations that most
represented his legacy until his death. He spoke at the Advocates
25th Anniversary celebration at FreedomFest in Las Vegas this past
July, and this month he completed a vigorous campaign for the U.S.
Senate on the Libertarian ticket.
FURTHER INFORMATION:
A detailed profile of Nolan is available at the Advocates'
Libertarianism.com website:
http://www.libertarianism.com/pop_celebrity/157
A great photo of David Nolan and Marshall Fritz, standing before
the Nolan Chart, is at:
http://www.theadvocates.org/content/david-nolan?nav=quiz
A history of the Nolan Chart can be found here:
http://www.theadvocates.org/content/the-nolan-chart?nav=quiz
The World's Smallest Political Quiz can be taken at:
http://www.theadvocates.org/quiz