class="pginternal" tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">437; legal and moral freedom, 438. § 3. Rights and obligations:—Their definition, 439; they are correlative, 440; physical rights, 442; limitations put upon them by war and punishment, 443; by poverty, 444; mental rights, 445; limitations to freedom of thought and expression, 446; education, 448.
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XXI. Civil Society and the Political State |
451 |
§ 1. Civil rights and obligations:—Their definition, 451; their classes, 452; significance of established remedies for wrongs, 454. § 2. Development of civil rights:—Contrast with savage age justice, 456; social harm versus metaphysical evil, 457; recognition of accident and intent, 459; of character and circumstances, 460; of mental incapacity, 462; significance of negligence and carelessness, 464; conflict of substantial and technical justice, 465; relations of the legal and moral, 467; reform of criminal procedure necessary, 468; also of punitive methods, 470; and of civil administration, 471. § 3. Political rights and obligations:—Significance of the state, 473; distrust of government, 474; indifference to politics, 476; political corruption, 477; reform of partisan machinery, 478; of governmental machinery, 479; constructive social legislation, 480; a federated humanity, 481. § 4. The moral criterion of political activity:—Its statement, 482; the individualistic formula, 483; the collectivistic formula, 484. |
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XXII. The Ethics of the Economic Life |
486 |
§ 1. General analysis:—The economic in relation to happiness, 487; relation to character, 488; social aspects, 491. § 2. The problem set by the new economic order:—Collective and impersonal organizations, 495; readjustments required, 496. § 3. The agencies for carrying on commerce and industry:—Early agencies, 497; the business enterprise, 498; the labor union, 499; reversion to group morality, 500; members and management, 500; employer and employed, 501; relations to the public, 502; to the law, 503. § 4. The methods of production, exchange, and valuation:—The machine, 507; basis of valuation, 508. § 5. The factors which aid ethical reconstruction:—Principles more easily seen, 511. |
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XXIII. Some Principles in the Economic Order |
514 |
1. Wealth subordinate to personality, 514. 2. Wealth and activity, 514. 3. Wealth and public service, 515. 4. A change demanded from individual to collective morality, 517. 5. Personal responsibility, 519. 6. Publicity and legal control, 520. 7. Democracy and distribution, 521. |
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XXIV. Unsettled Problems in the Economic Order |
523 |
§ 1. Individualism and socialism:—General statement, 523; equal opportunity, 526. § 2. Individualism or free contract analyzed; its values:—Efficiency, 527; initiative, 527; regulation of production, 528. § 3. Criticisms upon individualism:—It does not secure real freedom, 528; nor justice, 530; competition tends to destroy itself, 531; position of the aristocratic individualists, 532. |
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XXV. Unsettled Problems in the Economic Order (Continued) |
536 |
§ 4. The theory of public agency and control, 536. § 5. Society as agency of production:—Charges against private management, 537; corruption, 538; conditions of labor, 540; collective agency not necessarily social, 544. § 6. Theories of just distribution:—Individualistic theory, 546; equal division, 547; a working programme, 548. § 7. Ownership and use of property:—Defects in the present system, public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@39551@[email protected]#Page_551" class="pginternal"
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