About This Book
The work develops a philosophical account of the state as an organic social reality, arguing that the state embodies a collective will and moral purpose; it examines relations between individual freedom and social coercion, interprets rights and duties through recent psychological ideas, critiques and adapts Hegelian and idealist thought, and affirms the state's role in fostering character across social classes. Emphasizing theoretical clarification rather than practical prescriptions, it analyses foundations of political obligation, the nature of social recognition and the Real or General Will, and urges that social problems be treated as questions of life and mind rather than merely partisan issues.
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