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       William Graham Sumner

      Earth-Hunger and Other Essays

      Published by Good Press, 2020

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066066840

       Preface

       Autobiography [1903]

       The Teacher's Unconscious Success

       The Scientific Attitude of Mind

       Earth Hunger

       Purposes and Consequences

       Rights

       Equality

       First Steps Toward a Millennium [1888]

       What Is Civil Liberty?

       Is Liberty a Lost Blessing?

       Who Is Free? Is It the Savage?

       Who Is Free? Is It the Civilized Man?

       Who Is Free? Is It the Millionaire?

       Who Is Free? Is It the Tramp?

       Liberty and Responsibility

       Liberty and Law

       Liberty and Discipline

       Liberty and Property

       Liberty and Opportunity

       Liberty and Labor

       Does Labor Brutalize?

       Liberty and Machinery

       The Disappointment of Liberty

       Some Points in the New Social Creed

       An Examination of a Noble Sentiment

       The Banquet of Life

       Some Natural Rights

       The Abolition of Poverty

       The Boon of Nature

       Land Monopoly

       A Group of Natural Monopolies

       Another Chapter on Monopoly

       The Family Monopoly

       The Family and Property

       The State and Monopoly

       Democracy and Plutocracy

       Definitions of Democracy and Plutocracy

       Conflict of Plutocracy and Democracy

       Democracy and Modern Problems

       Separation of State and Market

       Social War in Democracy

       Economics and Politics

       The Power and Beneficence of Capital [1899]

       Sociological Fallacies [1884]

       What Our Boys are Reading [1880]

      PREFACE

       Table of Contents

      During the three years now elapsed since the publication of "War and Other Essays," it has become increasingly clear to the publishers and to the editor of that collection that their original enterprise should be followed up by another volume or two. There remain a number of Professor Sumner's shorter productions which have never been printed or which have been published in obscure, scattered, or inaccessible places.

      I feel this need of extending our enterprise the more strongly because I believe that a great deal of Sumner's writing has not grown old, and is not destined to grow old. It has been impressed upon me, as I have become more familiar with his essays of twenty and thirty years ago, that the issues which he treated, as he treated them, are always and everywhere with us. They are not of one time or one place. They are always with us because they are part of what Sumner so often calls "life here on earth." It was given to him to seize upon social issues in

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