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Human Society, by Ludwig von Mises

Human Society, by Ludwig von Mises
  1. Human Cooperation
  2. A Critique of the Holistic and Metaphysical View of Society
  3. The Division of Labor
  4. The Ricardian Law of Association
  1. 5. The Effects of the Division of Labor
  2. The Individual Within Society
  3. The Great Society
  4. The Instinct of Aggression and Destruction

The historical role of the theory of the division of labor as elaborated by British political economy from Hume to Ricardo consisted in the complete demolition of all metaphysical doctrines concerning the origin and the operation of social cooperation. It consummated the spiritual, moral and intellectual emancipation of mankind inaugurated by the philosophy of Epicureanism. It substituted an autonomous rational morality for the heteronomous and intuitionist ethics of older days. Law and legality, the moral code and social institutions are no longer revered as unfathomable decrees of Heaven. They are of human origin, and the only yardstick that must be applied to them is that of expediency with regard to human welfare. The utilitarian economist does not say: Fiat justitia, pereat mundus. He says: Fiat justitia, ne pereat mundus. He does not ask a man to renounce his well-being for the benefit of society. He advises him to recognize what his rightly understood interests are. In his eyes God's magnificence does not manifest itself in busy interference with sundry affairs of princes and politicians, but in endowing his creatures with reason and the urge toward the pursuit of happiness. FULL ARTICLE

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