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What Social Classes Owe to Each Other

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About This Book

The author defends individual responsibility and limited government, arguing that private saving and productive enterprise should not be penalized by redistributive policies. He criticizes sentimental reforms that reward idleness, cautions against collective interventions that shift burdens onto unconsenting taxpayers, and develops the idea of the forgotten individual who ultimately finances public charity. Across essays he examines principles of personal sovereignty, the value of self-help, the perils of organized pressure groups, and the social rule to mind one’s own business, while also noting that social order depends on moral restraints. The work combines political economy and moral argument to challenge prevailing reformist propositions.

About the Author

Sumner, William Graham portrait

William Graham Sumner

William Graham Sumner was an American sociologist and economist, recognized for his influential work in the late 19th century. He is best known for his book "Folkways," which explores the sociological significance of customs and social norms in shaping human behavior. Sumner's writings often addressed the complexities of social classes and the responsibilities they hold towards one another, as seen in his essays compiled in "The Forgotten Man, and Other Essays." His contributions to sociology and economic thought have left a lasting impact on the fields, making him a notable figure in American intellectual history.

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