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Hunting Down Social Darwinism - Will This Canard Go Extinct? (Hardcover)
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Hunting Down Social Darwinism - Will This Canard Go Extinct? (Hardcover)
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Hunting Down Social Darwinism is the third and final installment in
the trilogy, The Nature of Liberty. The trilogy gives a secular,
ethical defense of laissez-faire capitalism, inspired by Ayn Rand's
ideas. The trilogy's first book, The Freedom of Peaceful Action,
provided the philosophic theory behind the ethics of a
free-enterprise system based on the individual rights to life,
liberty, and private property which John Locke described. The
second installment, Life in the Market Ecosystem, explained how
free enterprise functions much as a natural ecosystem wherein
behavioral norms develop, bottom-up, from repeat interactions among
individual participants in the economy. As such defenses of free
enterprise are frequently criticized as "social Darwinism,"
however, this third and final installment of the trilogy asks the
question, "What is social Darwinism?" The book embarks on a hunt
for the term's meaning, explores social Darwinism's beginnings, and
examines whether it is fair to describe such nineteenth-century
free-market advocates as Herbert Spencer and William Graham Sumner
as social Darwinists. It then addresses the accusation that the
free-market Darwinism commonly ascribed to Spencer and Sumner
rationalized bigotry and founded the pseudoscience of eugenics. In
the process, the book refutes various myths about the topic
popularized by such scholars as Richard Hofstadter and John Kenneth
Galbraith. The extent to which the popular narratives about social
Darwinism prove to be inaccurate holds enormous ramifications for
current controversies. It has implications for debates over the
ethical appropriateness of reducing taxpayer spending on social
welfare programs, and also sheds new light on the pros and cons of
attempts to apply biological evolutionary theory to the study of
human social institutions. Additionally discussed is the manner in
which various prominent figures in economics, evolutionary
psychology, and Complexity Theory have grown famous for advancing
ideas which Spencer and Sumner originated, even as such figures
simultaneously downplay the importance of Spencer and Sumner to
their field. Following the hunt for social Darwinism, this work
sums up the trilogy with some final thoughts on the importance that
liberty holds for every effort to live life to the fullest.
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