Hörbuch: Social Statics
Social Statics
1 - Preface and Introduction: The Doctrine of Expediency, The Doctrine of the Moral Sense
- Download Preface and Introduction: The Doctrine of Expediency, The Doctrine of the Moral Sense audio
- Download Introduction: Lemma I audio
- Download Introduction: Lemma II audio
- Download Part 1, Chapter 1, Definition of Morality audio
- Download Part 1, Chapter 2, The Evanescence of Evil audio
- Download Part 1, Chapter 3, The Divine Idea; and the Conditions of its Realization audio
- Download Part 2, Chapter 4, Derivation of a First Principle audio
- Download Part 2, Chapter 5, Secondary Derivation of a First Principle audio
- Download Part 2, Chapter 6, First Principle audio
- Download Part 2, Chapter 7, Application of this First Principle, Chapter 8, The Rights of Life and Personal Liberty audio
- Download Part 2, Chapter 9, The Right to the Use of the Earth audio
- Download Part 2, Chapter 10, The Right of Property audio
- Download Part 2, Chapter 11, The Right of Property in Idea, Chapter 12, The Right of Property in Character audio
- Download Part 2, Chapter 13, The Right of Exchange, Chapter 14, The Right of Free Speech, Chapter 15, Further Rights audio
- Download Part 2, Chapter 16, The Rights of Women, Part 1 audio
- Download Part 2, Chapter 16, The Rights of Women, Part 2 audio
- Download Part 2, Chapter 17, The Rights of Children, Part 1 audio
- Download Part 2, Chapter 17, The Rights of Children, Part 2 audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 18, Political Rights audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 19, The Right to Ignore the State audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 20, The Constitution of the State, Part 1 audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 20, The Constitution of the State, Part 2 audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 21, The Duty of the State, Part 1 audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 21, The Duty of the State, Part 2 audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 22, The Limit of State-Duty, Part 1 audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 22, The Limit of State-Duty, Part 2 audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 23, The Regulation of Commerce audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 24, Religious Establishments audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 25, Poor-Laws audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 26, National Education, Part 1 audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 26, National Education, Part 2 audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 27, Government Colonization audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 28, Sanitary Supervision, Part 1 audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 28, Sanitary Supervision, Part 2 audio
- Download Part 3, Chapter 29, Currency, Postal Arrangements audio
- Download Part 4, Chapter 30, General Considerations, Part 1 audio
- Download Part 4, Chapter 30, General Considerations, Part 2 audio
- Download Part 4, Chapter 30, General Considerations, Part 3 audio
- Download Part 4, Chapter 31, Summary audio
- Download Part 4, Chapter 32, Conclusion audio
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Beschreibung
Social Statics, or The Conditions essential to Happiness specified, and the First of them Developed is an 1851 book by the British polymath Herbert Spencer. In it, he uses the term "fitness" in applying his ideas of Lamarckian evolution to society, saying for example that "It is clear that any being whose constitution is to be moulded into fitness for new conditions of existence must be placed under those conditions. Or, putting the proposition specifically — it is clear that man can become adapted to the social state, only by being retained in the social state. This granted, it follows that as man has been, and is still, deficient in those feelings which, by dictating just conduct, prevent the perpetual antagonism of individuals and their consequent disunion, some artificial agency is required by which their union may be maintained. Only by the process of adaptation itself can be produced that character which makes social equilibrium spontaneous." Despite its commonly being attributed to this book, it was not until his Principles of Biology of 1864 that Spencer coined the phrase "survival of the fittest", which he would later apply to economics and biology. This was a key tenet of so-called Social Darwinism. Economist Murray Rothbard called Social Statics "the greatest single work of libertarian political philosophy ever written. (Wikipedia)
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