The American ConditionDoubleday, 1974 - 407 páginas Analyzes the nature and evolution of freedom in America, arguing that social fragmentation and individualism are threatening its continued existence. |
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Página 303
... relationships and organization . Nor is it useful to call property " private " because it is not owned or wholly controlled by govern- ment . That does not describe the relationship of owners and man- agers to property , or the extent ...
... relationships and organization . Nor is it useful to call property " private " because it is not owned or wholly controlled by govern- ment . That does not describe the relationship of owners and man- agers to property , or the extent ...
Página 313
... relationships are obscure . Government could make fundamental changes in private relationships only by giving itself a new form , by becoming a different kind of government . One cannot , for example , imagine the Soviet Union restoring ...
... relationships are obscure . Government could make fundamental changes in private relationships only by giving itself a new form , by becoming a different kind of government . One cannot , for example , imagine the Soviet Union restoring ...
Página 357
... relationships dominate this social process because they bring forth material necessities and these objects of desire whose satisfaction , requiring most of our energy , become the social translation of our humanity . By separating ...
... relationships dominate this social process because they bring forth material necessities and these objects of desire whose satisfaction , requiring most of our energy , become the social translation of our humanity . By separating ...
Términos y frases comunes
alienation American assertion authority awareness become belief billion bureaucracy capacity capital century choice companies consciousness consequence contained continually corporation create creation demand describe desire determine direct dominant economic economic bureaucracy economic process elements eliminate entire established example exchange existence experience expressed external fact forces freedom function growth historical human idea ideology important income increase individual industrial institutions interest investment labor laws less liberating limits managers Marx material means moral mysticism nature necessary necessity objects once oppression organization ownership political possible present production protect reality reduce relations relationships requires response result ruling scientific reason seems sense shared skills social society standard structure sustain thing thought tion traditional true union wants wealth workers