Liberalism is typically misconceived as a philosophy of
individualism, which cannot accept that man exists in society and
that man's values are shaped by that society. This book attempts to
identify the role of community and society in the political and
social thought of leading liberal social philosophers of the 19th
and 20th centuries including John Stuart Mill, Herbert Spencer and
Friedrich A. von Hayek. While differing as to the nature of man and
society, each thinker examined holds the basic premise that man is
not an isolated creature whose life is 'nasty, brutish and short'
but rather that his motivations are dependent upon his place in a
social order.
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