000 01502nam a2200193Ia 4500
999 _c4390
_d4390
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082 _a306.3 Rus 2nd ed.
100 _aRussel, Bertrand.
245 0 _aProspects of industrial civilization
250 _a2nd ed.
260 _aLondon
260 _bGeorge Allen and Unwin
260 _c1959
300 _a283 p.
520 _aThe Prospects of Industrial Civilization is considered the most ambitious of Bertrand Russell's works on modern society. It offers a rare glimpse into often-ignored subtleties of his political thought and in it he argues that industrialism is a threat to human freedom, since it is fundamentally linked with nationalism. His proposal for one government for the whole world as the ultimate solution, along with his argument that the global village and prevailing political democracy should be its eventual results, is both provocative and thoroughly engaging. The conflict between capitalist and socialist direction of industry, formerly regarded as an internal struggle within each nation, and now relegated to the background by many politicians in the highly industrialized nations, has in fact assumed tremen dous and dangerous importance in the international sphere, in that the world now stands divided between the communist block and the block of nations still committed in greater or lesser degree to the methods of free enterprise.
650 _aIndustry and State
942 _cB
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