About This Book
The essay argues that replacing private property with cooperative social arrangements would eliminate poverty and free individuals from coerced altruism and degrading dependence produced by charity. With material security assured, people could pursue artistic, intellectual, and moral self-realization; however, an authoritarian, state-controlled industrial system would stifle freedom. The work critiques sentimental philanthropy and private property as inadequate remedies that prolong suffering, defends disobedience and dissent as engines of progress, and emphasizes individualism as the condition for genuine cultural and spiritual flourishing.
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