ABSTRACT

Herbert Spencer (1820-1903) was regarded by the Victorians as the foremost philosopher of the age, the prophet of evolution at a time when the idea had gripped the popular imagination. Until recently Spencer's posthumous reputation rested almost excusively on his social and political thought, which has itself frequently been subject to serious misrepresentation. But historians of ideas now recognise that an acquaintance with Spencer's thought is essential for the proper understanding of many aspects of Victorian intellectual life, and the present selection is designed to answer this need. It provides a cross-section of Spencer's works from his more popular and approachable essays to a number of the volumes of the Synthetic Philosophy itself. Volume III: Social Statics, Or the Conditions Essential to Human Happiness specified and then the fifst of them Developed.

chapter |51 pages

Introduction.

part |20 pages

Part I.

chapter Chapter I|4 pages

Definition of Morality.

chapter Chapter II|7 pages

The Evanescence of Evil.

chapter Chapter III|7 pages

The Divine Idea, and the Conditions of its Realization.

part |120 pages

Part II.

chapter Chapter IV|15 pages

Derivation of a First Principle.

chapter Chapter V|13 pages

Secondary Derivation of a First Principle.

chapter Chapter VI|7 pages

First Principle.

chapter Chapter VII|2 pages

Application of this First Principle.

chapter Chapter VIII|2 pages

The Rights of Life and Personal Liberty.

chapter Chapter IX|12 pages

The Right to the Use of the Earth.

chapter Chapter X|10 pages

The Right of Property.

chapter Chapter XI|7 pages

The Right of Property in Ideas.

chapter Chapter XII|3 pages

The Right of Property in Character.

chapter Chapter XIII|2 pages

The Right of Exchange.

chapter Chapter XIV|6 pages

The Right of Free Speech.

chapter Chapter XV|1 pages

Further Rights.

chapter Chapter XVI|17 pages

The Rights of Women.

chapter Chapter XVII|21 pages

The Rights of Children.

part |214 pages

Part III.

chapter Chapter XVIII|11 pages

Political Rights.

chapter Chapter XIX|11 pages

The Right to Ignore the State.

chapter Chapter XX|33 pages

The Constitution of the State a .

chapter Chapter XXI|24 pages

The Duty of the State.

chapter Chapter XXII|22 pages

The Limit of State-Duty.

chapter Chapter XXIII|9 pages

The Regulation of Commerce.

chapter Chapter XXIV|6 pages

Religious Establishments.

chapter Chapter XXV|19 pages

Poor-Laws.

chapter Chapter XXVI|27 pages

National Education.

chapter Chapter XXVII|15 pages

Government Colonization.

chapter Chapter XXVIII|24 pages

Sanitary Supervision.

chapter Chapter XXIX|11 pages

Currency, Postal Arrangements, etc.

part |70 pages

Part IV.

chapter Chapter XXX|48 pages

General Considerations.

chapter Chapter XXXI|6 pages

Summary.

chapter Chapter XXXII|14 pages

Conclusion.