
Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy
Joseph A. Schumpeter
Bok · Engelsk · 2012
Utgitt | Hoboken : Taylor and Francis, , 2012
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Omfang | 448 s.
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Opplysninger | 1. utg.: 1942. - Second Edition Text (1946). - Front Cover: Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy; Copyright Page; Contents; Introduction by Richard Swedberg; Part I: The Marxian Doctrine; Prologue; I. Marx the Prophet; II. Marx the Sociologist; III. Marx the Economist; IV. Marx the Teacher; Part II: Can Capitalism Survive?; Prologue; V. The Rate of Increase of Total Output; VI. Plausible Capitalism; VII. The Process of Creative Destruction; VIII.Monopolistic Practices; IX. Closed Season; X. The Vanishing of Investment Opportunity; XI. The Civilization of Capitalism; XII.Crumbling Walls; I. The Obsolescence of the Entrepreneurial Function. - I. English Developments and the Spirit of FabianismII. Sweden on the One Hand and Russia on the Other; III. Socialist Groups in the United States; IV. The French Case; Analysis of Syndicalism; V. The German Party and Revisionism; the AustrianSocialists; VI. The Second International; XXVII. From the First to the Second World War; I. The "Gran Rifiuto"; II. The Effects of the First World War on the Chances of theSocialist Parties of Europe; III. Communism and the Russian Element; IV. Administering Capitalism?; V. The Present War and the Future of Socialist Parties. - I. The Common Good and the Will of the PeopleII. The Will of the People and Individual Volition; III. Human Nature in Politics; IV. Reasons for the Survival of the Classical Doctrine; XXII. Another Theory of Democracy; I. Competition for Political Leadership; II. The Principle Applied; XXIII. The Inference; I. Some Implications of the Preceding Analysis; II. Conditions for the Success of the Democratic Method; III. Democracy in the Socialist Order; Part V: A Historical Sketch of Socialist Parties; Prologue; XXIV.The Nonage; XXV.The Situation That Marx Faced; XXVI.From 1875 To 1914. - II. The Destruction of the Protecting StrataIII. The Destruction of the Institutional Framework ofCapitalist Society; XIII. Growing Hostility; I. The Social Atmosphere of Capitalism; II. The Sociology of the Intellectual; XIV. Decomposition; Part III: Can Socialism Work?; XV. Clearing Decks; XVI.The Socialist Blueprint; XVII. Comparison of Blueprints; I. A Preliminary Point; II. A Discussion of Comparative Efficiency; III. The Case for the Superiority of the Socialist Blueprint; XVIII.The Human Element; A Warning; I. The Historical Relativity of the Argument; II. About Demigods and Archangels. - III. The Problem of Bureaucratic ManagementIV. Saving and Discipline; V. Authoritarian Discipline in Socialism; a Lesson fromRussia; XIX.Transition; I. Two Different Problems Distinguished; II. Socialization in a State of Maturity; III. Socialization in a State of Immaturity; IV. Socialist Policy Before the Act; the English Example; Part IV: Socialism and Democracy; XX. The Setting of the Problem; I. The Dictatorship of the Proletariat; II. The Record of Socialist Parties; III. A Mental Experiment; IV. In Search of a Definition; XXI. The Classical Doctrine of Democracy. - XXVIII. The Consequences of the Second World War. - Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy remains one of the greatest works of social theory written this century. When it first appeared the New English Weekly predicted that `for the next five to ten years it will cetainly remain a work with which no one who professes any degree of information on sociology or economics can afford to be unacquainted.' Fifty years on, this prediction seems a little understated.Why has the work endured so well? Schumpeter's contention that the seeds of capitalism's decline were internal, and his equal and opposite hostility to centralist soc
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Dewey | |
ISBN | 978-1-61720-865-2 : Nkr 200.00
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Hylleplass | 330.12 S
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