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The story of utopias

Chapter 2: ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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About This Book

The work traces the history of utopian thinking from classical antiquity through the Renaissance and the modern era, surveying how successive thinkers imagined ideal commonwealths. It examines philosophical blueprints for social order, land-based and industrial schemes, mechanistic and pastoral visions, and the ways technological change reshaped hopes for cooperative communities. Case studies of influential proposals illustrate recurring themes: the tension between individual freedom and collective design, the role of property and industry, and the pitfalls of one-sided reforms. The concluding chapters assess failures of past models and outline principles for a more balanced, practicable eutopia.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The first outline of this book dates back ten years; and since then I have woven it and rewoven it in my mind. The actual work of composition was started by a suggestion from Mr. Van Wyck Brooks; and without Mr. Brooks’ encouragement I should perhaps never have begun or carried through the task. The general background of ideas has been heavily colored by my contacts with Professor Patrick Geddes, through his books and by correspondence; and I owe a debt to him I have not always been able to acknowledge in direct reference or in quotation marks. I take the opportunity here to express the hearty gratitude which might otherwise have been conveyed in the more archaic form of a dedication.

In the revision of the MS. I have been blessed with the generous advice and criticism of a number of friends; in particular, Mr. Clarence Britten, Mr. Herbert Feis, Mr. Geroid Robinson, and Miss Sophia Wittenberg, each of whom performed a unique service. To Messrs. Victor Branford and Alexander Farquharson of the Sociological Society of Great Britain I am indebted for many pertinent suggestions. My thanks are also due to the editors of The Freeman for permission to use extracts from two articles: Towards a Humanist Synthesis and Beauty and the Picturesque. Finally, Mr. Hendrik van Loon’s friendly interest calls for a departing beam of gratitude.

Lewis Mumford.

New York City.