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Social Life and Moral Judgment (Paperback)
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Social Life and Moral Judgment (Paperback)
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In Social Life and Moral Judgment, author and philosopher Antony
Flew examines the social problems induced by the mature welfare
state. Welfare states make ever-increasing financial demands on
their citizenry, yet the evidence clearly supports that such
demands are not sustainable. In this superlative collection of
thematic essays, Flew investigates and explains why this is so, and
calls for a return to individual responsibility. The first essay
establishes the philosophical basis for his argument. "Is Human
Sociobiology Possible?" answers its titular question in the
negative, asserting that we are all members of a peculiar type of
creature that can, and therefore must, be responsible for whatever
choices between various courses of action or inaction that are open
to us as individuals. In other essays, Flew shows how state welfare
systems inevitably corrupt and demoralize their citizens by
encouraging ever-more people to apply for welfare entitlements and
reducing the incentives to avoid or escape the conditions
warranting those entitlements. He investigates the origins of this
new kind of welfare entitlement, and shows how very different what
politicians and public sector employees produce is from what these
people claim to be producing. Flew shows that the drive for
"social" justice appears to require that the justly acquired income
and wealth of all citizens should be progressively taxed away or
supplemented by the state so that the eventual result is more,
though never perfect, equality. This objective, he asserts, must be
radically distinguished from old-fashioned, without prefix or
suffix, justice. It was this type of justice Adam Smith referred to
when he famously said that it is a virtue "of which the observance
is not left to the freedom of our wills" but "which may be extorted
by force." Flew question the aims of those who would discredit
wealth creators and wealth-creating investment, showing that these
are the same people who promote the rising "progressive" taxation
needed to finance expenditure in the growing welfare state. Social
Life and Moral Judgment is a timely critique, one that will be
appreciated at a point in history when governments on both sides of
the Atlantic have begun to describe spending on state health,
social, education, and welfare services as investments, instead of
mechanisms to achieve social justice.
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