Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I PROPERTY THE MAIN CONDITION OF SURVIVAL. THE GENERAL PROPOSITION STATED
- CHAPTER II THE SAME CONSIDERED HISTORICALLY. PRIMITIVE FORMS OF SOCIETY AND THE VILLAGE COMMUNITY
- CHAPTER III ENGLISH VILLENAGE
- CHAPTER IV THE BLACK DEATH AND THE DIVORCE OF THE LABOURER FROM THE LAND
- CHAPTER V THE INCREASE OF SHEER-FARMING, AND THE GROWTH OF A PROLETARIATE
- CHAPTER VI TOWN LIFE AND THE TRADE GILDS
- CHAPTER VII SOCIAL LEGISLATION AND THE POOR LAW
- CHAPTER VIII THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
- CHAPTER IX THE THEORY OF WAGES
- CHAPTER X PRIVATE PROPERTY AND POPULATION
- CHAPTER XI THE MODERN ASPECT OF THE POOR LAW
- CHAPTER XII THE POOR LAW, continued
- CHAPTER XIII INSURANCE A SUBSTITUTE FOR THE POOR LAW
- CHAPTER XIV SOME FORMS OF SOCIALISTIC LEGISLATION
- CHAPTER XV THE ETHICAL ASPECT OF THE QUESTION
CHAPTER XI - THE MODERN ASPECT OF THE POOR LAW
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I PROPERTY THE MAIN CONDITION OF SURVIVAL. THE GENERAL PROPOSITION STATED
- CHAPTER II THE SAME CONSIDERED HISTORICALLY. PRIMITIVE FORMS OF SOCIETY AND THE VILLAGE COMMUNITY
- CHAPTER III ENGLISH VILLENAGE
- CHAPTER IV THE BLACK DEATH AND THE DIVORCE OF THE LABOURER FROM THE LAND
- CHAPTER V THE INCREASE OF SHEER-FARMING, AND THE GROWTH OF A PROLETARIATE
- CHAPTER VI TOWN LIFE AND THE TRADE GILDS
- CHAPTER VII SOCIAL LEGISLATION AND THE POOR LAW
- CHAPTER VIII THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
- CHAPTER IX THE THEORY OF WAGES
- CHAPTER X PRIVATE PROPERTY AND POPULATION
- CHAPTER XI THE MODERN ASPECT OF THE POOR LAW
- CHAPTER XII THE POOR LAW, continued
- CHAPTER XIII INSURANCE A SUBSTITUTE FOR THE POOR LAW
- CHAPTER XIV SOME FORMS OF SOCIALISTIC LEGISLATION
- CHAPTER XV THE ETHICAL ASPECT OF THE QUESTION
Summary
Our social instincts, which are perhaps the religious development of a sentiment at first merely gregarious, make us desire a greater amount of equality among all classes of men. It is right that we should wish to see the poorer classes of the country sharing, more largely than they do at present, in the security of maintenance which civilisation ought to give. If it were not for this moralised instinct we might absolve ourselves from all concern in the process of human domestication. We should then regard differences of social condition in human society as the divergences of incipient varieties or species. Such a view is repellent to our humanity; we desire to see human progress, or in a narrower sense national progress, represented by a more or less uniform type of prosperity and comfort. We seek to raise the poorer classes, which, from causes for which the present generation is not responsible, have fallen below the due level of comfort, to a state more consonant with the demands of civilised sentiment.
This is the problem. It is the business of the statesman to discover the law of progress, and to endeavour to give free scope to its operation at those points of our social arrangements where reformation is necessary.
Our argument has been that most of the evils from which we are suffering have been brought about by State interference with the natural ability of each individual organism to adjust itself to its environment.
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- The English Poor , pp. 193 - 216Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1889