The Project Gutenberg EBook of Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of Upton Sinclair, by Upton Sinclair This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. Title: Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of Upton Sinclair Author: Upton Sinclair Editor: David Widger Release Date: June 3, 2019 [EBook #59670] Language: English Character set encoding: UTF-8 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INDEX OF THE PG WORKS OF SINCLAIR *** Produced by David Widger
PREFACE |
PRESS COMMENTS ON THE PLAY |
CHAPTER I |
CHAPTER II |
CHAPTER III |
CHAPTER IV |
CHAPTER V |
CHAPTER VI |
THE PROFITS OF RELIGION |
OFFERTORY |
INTRODUCTORY |
BOOTSTRAP-LIFTING |
RELIGION |
BOOK ONE — The Church of the Conquerors |
The Priestly Lie |
The Great Fear |
Salve Regina! |
Fresh Meat |
Priestly Empires |
Prayer-wheels |
The Butcher-Gods |
The Holy Inquisition |
Hell-Fire |
BOOK TWO — The Church of Good Society |
The Babylonian Fire-god |
The Medicine-men |
The Canonization of Incompetence |
Gibson's Preservative |
The Elders |
Church History |
Land and Livings |
Graft in Tail |
Bishops and Beer |
Anglicanism and Alcohol |
Dead Cats |
Suffer Little Children |
The Court Circular |
Horn-blowing |
Trinity Corporation |
Spiritual Interpretation |
BOOK THREE — The Church of the Servant-girls |
Charity |
God's Armor |
Thanksgivings |
The Holy Roman Empire |
Temporal Power |
Knights of Slavery |
Priests and Police |
The Church Militant |
The Church Triumphant |
God in the Schools |
The Menace |
King Coal |
The Unholy Alliance |
Secret Service |
Tax Exemption |
"Holy History" |
Das Centrum |
BOOK FOUR — The Church of the Slavers |
Face of Caesar |
Deutschland ueber Alles |
Der Tag. |
King Cotton |
Witches and Women |
Moth and Rust |
The Octopus |
The Industrial Shelley |
The Outlook for Graft |
Clerical Camouflage |
The Jungle |
BOOK FIVE — The Church of the Merchants |
The Head Merchant |
"Herr Beeble" |
Holy Oil |
Rhetorical Black-hanging |
The Great American Fraud |
Riches in Glory |
Captivating Ideals |
Spook Hunting |
Running the Rapids |
Birth Control |
Sheep |
BOOK SIX — The Church of the Quacks |
Tabula Rasa |
The Book of Mormon |
Holy Rolling |
Bible Prophecy |
Koreshanity |
Mazdaznan |
Black Magic |
Mental Malpractice |
Science and Wealth |
New Nonsense |
"Dollars Want Me" |
Spiritual Financiering |
The Graft of Grace |
BOOK SEVEN — The Church of the Social Revolution |
Christ and Caesar |
Locusts and Wild Honey |
Mother Earth |
The Soap Box |
The Church Machine |
The Church Redeemed |
The Desire of Nations |
The Knowable |
Nature's Insurgent Son |
The New Morality |
Envoi |
Reader: |
CHARACTERS |
THE NATUREWOMAN |
ACT I |
ACT II |
ACT III |
ACT IV |
ACT I |
ACT II |
ACT III |
ACT IV |
CHARACTERS |
THE MACHINE |
ACT I |
ACT II |
ACT III |
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JIMMIE HIGGINS | |
CHAPTER I | JIMMIE HIGGINS MEETS THE CANDIDATE |
CHAPTER II | JIMMIE HIGGINS HEARS A SPEECH |
CHAPTER III | JIMMIE HIGGINS DEBATES THE ISSUE |
CHAPTER IV | JIMMIE HIGGINS STRIKES IT RICH |
CHAPTER V | JIMMIE HIGGINS HELPS THE KAISER |
CHAPTER VI | JIMMIE HIGGINS GOES TO JAIL |
CHAPTER VII | JIMMIE HIGGINS DALLIES WITH CUPID |
CHAPTER VIII | JIMMIE HIGGINS PUTS HIS FOOT IN IT |
CHAPTER IX | JIMMIE HIGGINS RETURNS TO NATURE |
CHAPTER X | JIMMIE HIGGINS MEETS THE OWNER |
CHAPTER XI | JIMMIE HIGGINS FACES THE WAR |
CHAPTER XII | JIMMIE HIGGINS MEETS A PATRIOT |
CHAPTER XIII | JIMMIE HIGGINS DODGES TROUBLE |
CHAPTER XIV | JIMMIE HIGGINS TAKES THE ROAD |
CHAPTER XV | JIMMIE HIGGINS TURNS BOLSHEVIK |
CHAPTER XVI | JIMMIE HIGGINS MEETS THE TEMPTER |
CHAPTER XVII | JIMMIE HIGGINS WRESTLES WITH THE TEMPTER |
CHAPTER XVIII | JIMMIE HIGGINS TAKES THE PLUNGE |
CHAPTER XIX | JIMMIE HIGGINS PUTS ON KHAKI |
CHAPTER XX | JIMMIE HIGGINS TAKES A SWIM |
CHAPTER XXI | JIMMIE HIGGINS ENTERS SOCIETY |
CHAPTER XXII | JIMMIE HIGGINS WORKS FOR HIS UNCLE |
CHAPTER XXIII | JIMMIE HIGGINS MEETS THE HUN |
CHAPTER XXIV | JIMMIE HIGGINS SEES THE OTHER SIDE |
CHAPTER XXV | JIMMIE HIGGINS ENTERS INTO DANGER |
CHAPTER XXVI | JIMMIE HIGGINS DISCOVERS HIS SOUL |
CHAPTER XXVII | JIMMIE HIGGINS VOTES FOR DEMOCRACY |
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THE POT BOILER |
ACT I. |
ACT II. |
ACT III. |
ACT IV. |
POSTSCRIPT |
SYLVIA’S MARRIAGE |
BOOK I. SYLVIA AS WIFE |
BOOK II. SYLVIA AS MOTHER |
BOOK III. SYLVIA AS REBEL |
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INTRODUCTION | |
BOOK ONE | THE DOMAIN OF KING COAL |
BOOK TWO | THE SERFS OF KING COAL |
BOOK THREE | THE HENCHMEN OF KING COAL |
BOOK FOUR | THE WILL OF KING COAL |
POSTSCRIPT |
EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION |
READER: |
PART I. WRITING A POEM |
PART II. SEEKING A PUBLISHER |
PART III. THE END |
I. | SIGHTING A PRIZE. | 5 |
II. | A LONG CHASE. | 10 |
III. | AN OLD ENEMY. | 19 |
IV. | IN COMMAND OF THE PRIZE. | 28 |
V. | A HAIL FROM THE DARKNESS. | 32 |
VI. | REPELLING BOARDERS. | 39 |
VII. | A DESPERATE CHASE. | 46 |
VIII. | A DASH FOR THE SHORE. | 51 |
IX. | THE ENEMY'S COUNTRY. | 56 |
X. | A STARTLING DISCOVERY. | 63 |
XI. | A RUNNING FIGHT. | 67 |
XII. | THE FIRST PRISONERS OF WAR. | 72 |
XIII. | IGNACIO'S PLOTS. | 78 |
XIV. | BESSIE STUART. | 85 |
XV. | IN MORRO CASTLE. | 94 |
XVI. | IN THE DUNGEON VAULTS. | 99 |
XVII. | OUT OF THE DUNGEON. | 104 |
XVIII. | CLIF FARADAY'S SACRIFICE. | 112 |
XIX. | A FAREWELL. | 120 |
XX. | AN UNEXPECTED PERIL. | 127 |
XXI. | RECAPTURED BY THE ENEMY. | 133 |
XXII. | CUTTING A CABLE. | 139 |
XXIII. | A PERILOUS DETAIL. | 146 |
XXIV. | THE CUBAN COURIER. | 152 |
XXV. | "IN THE NAME OF HUMANITY AND THE SAILORS OF THE MAINE!" | 158 |
XXVI. | A GAME OF BLUFF. | 164 |
XXVII. | IN WHICH CLIF MEETS WITH A SURPRISE. | 170 |
XXVIII. | A STRUGGLE AGAINST ODDS. | 176 |
XXIX. | CLIF'S SECOND EXPEDITION. | 182 |
XXX. | THE BATTLE IN THE BRUSH. | 187 |
XXXI. | CAPTURED. | 194 |
XXXII. | CLIF FARADAY'S TEST. | 201 |
XXXIII. | THE MYSTERY OF THE UNEXPLODED SHELL. | 208 |
CHAPTER | PAGE | |
I— | A "Yearling" Meeting | 7 |
II— | Mark's Mysterious Visitor | 19 |
III— | Trouble for Mark | 26 |
IV— | The Explanation | 38 |
V— | Mark in Disgrace | 46 |
VI— | Indian's Re-examination | 58 |
VII— | The Examination of the Parson | 66 |
VIII— | The Rescue Party | 72 |
IX— | Heroism of the Parson | 76 |
X— | More Troubles | 81 |
XI— | Disadvantages of "Coventry" | 85 |
XII— | The Embassy of the Parson | 91 |
XIII— | Preparations for the Battle | 99 |
XIV— | The Affair at the Fort | 109 |
XV— | Two Plebes in Hospital | 117 |
XVI— | The Parson's Indignation | 124 |
XVII— | Indian in Trouble | 133 |
XVIII— | To the Rescue | 146 |
XIX— | The Alliance is Completed | 156 |
XX— | Indignation of the Yearlings | 162 |
XXI— | A Mild Attempt at Hazing | 171 |
XXII— | The Bombshell Falls | 177 |
XXIII— | In the Shadow of Dismissal | 185 |
XXIV— | A Letter | 193 |
XXV— | A Swimming Match | 204 |
XXVI— | The Finish of a Race | 211 |
XXVII— | What Mark Did | 219 |
XXVIII— | Mark Meets the Superintendent | 231 |
XXIX— | The Seven in Session | 239 |
XXX— | The Move into Camp | 248 |
XXXI— | "First Night" | 257 |
XXXII— | Conclusion | 268 |
CHAPTER | PAGE | |
I.— | A Letter from a "Furlough Man" | 7 |
II.— | Mark's Idea | 15 |
III.— | A New Ally | 22 |
IV.— | A Surprise for the Seven | 31 |
V.— | The Scheme Succeeds | 36 |
VI.— | What Mark Overheard | 46 |
VII.— | Mark's Counterplot | 57 |
VIII.— | The Attack on Mark | 65 |
IX.— | Three Discomfited Yearlings | 74 |
X.— | Texas Runs Amuck | 80 |
XI.— | Texas Raids West Point | 91 |
XII.— | The Cause of a Friend | 103 |
XIII.— | The Reformation of Texas | 110 |
XIV.— | A Plot of the Yearlings | 118 |
XV.— | The Plebes Plot, Too | 128 |
XVI.— | Setting the Trap | 133 |
XVII.— | The Result at the Hop | 141 |
XVIII.— | A Strange Announcement | 149 |
XIX.— | Texas Turns Highwayman | 160 |
XX.— | Two Midnight Prowlers | 167 |
XXI.— | Benny is Exposed | 178 |
XXII.— | Mark Receives a Committee | 183 |
XXIII.— | A Fight, and Other Things | 199 |
XXIV.— | Six to the Rescue | 208 |
XXV.— | Mark in the Hospital | 216 |
XXVI.— | Texas Has an Interview | 224 |
XXVII.— | A Plot to Beat "the General" | 232 |
XXVIII.— | "Bull" Finds an Ally | 241 |
XXIX.— | Strange Conduct | 250 |
XXX.— | A Surprise for Murray | 256 |
XXXI.— | The Plot Succeeds | 265 |
XXXII.— | Triumph—Conclusion | 277 |
PAGE | |
Chapter I. The Nature of Life | 3 |
Attempts to show what we know about life; to set the bounds of real truth as distinguished from phrases and self-deception. |
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Chapter II. The Nature of Faith | 8 |
Attempts to show what we can prove by our reason, and what we know intuitively; what is implied in the process of thinking, and without which no thought could be. |
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Chapter III. The Use of Reason | 12 |
Attempts to show that in the field to which reason
applies we are compelled to use it, and are justified in trusting it. |
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Chapter IV. The Origin of Morality | 17 |
Compares the ways of Nature with human morality, and tries to show how the latter came to be. |
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Chapter V. Nature and Man | 21 |
Attempts to show how man has taken control of Nature, and is carrying on her processes and improving upon them. |
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Chapter VI. Man the Rebel | 27 |
Shows the transition stage between instinct and reason, in which man finds himself, and how he can advance to a securer condition. |
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Chapter VII. Making Our Morals | 31 |
Attempts to show that human morality must change to fit human facts, and there can be no judge of it save human reason. |
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Chapter VIII. The Virtue of Moderation | 37 |
Attempts to show that wise conduct is an adjustment of means to ends, and depends upon the understanding of a particular set of circumstances. |
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Chapter IX. The Choosing of Life | 42 |
Discusses the standards by which we may judge what is best in life, and decide what we wish to make of it. |
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Chapter X. Myself and My Neighbor | 50 |
Compares the new morality with the old, and discusses
the relative importance of our various duties. |
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Chapter XI. The Mind and the Body | 53 |
Discusses the interaction between physical and mental things, and the possibility of freedom in a world of fixed causes. |
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Chapter XII. The Mind of the Body | 61 |
Discusses the subconscious mind, what it is, what it
does to the body, and how it can be controlled and made use of by the intelligence. |
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Chapter XIII. Exploring the Subconscious | 67 |
Discusses automatic writing, the analysis of dreams, and other methods by which a new universe of life has been brought to human knowledge. |
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Chapter XIV. The Problem of Immortality | 74 |
Discusses the survival of personality from the moral
point of view: that is, have we any claim upon life, entitling us to live forever? |
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Chapter XV. The Evidence for Survival | 81 |
Discusses the data of psychic research, and the proofs
of spiritism thus put before us. |
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Chapter XVI. The Powers of the Mind | 91 |
Sets forth the fact that knowledge is freedom and
ignorance is slavery, and what science means to the people. |
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Chapter XVII. The Conduct of the Mind | 98 |
Concludes the Book of the Mind with a study of how to preserve and develop its powers for the protection of our lives and the lives of all men. |
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PART TWO: THE BOOK OF THE BODY | |
Chapter XVIII. The Unity of the Body | 105 |
Discusses the body as a whole, and shows that health is not a matter of many different organs and functions, but is one problem of one organism. |
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Chapter XIX. Experiments in Diet | 115 |
Narrates the author's adventures in search of health,
and his conclusions as to what to eat. |
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Chapter XX. Errors in Diet | 123 |
Discusses the different kinds of foods, and the part
they play in the making of health and disease. |
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Chapter XXI. Diet Standards | 134 |
Discusses various foods and their food values, the
quantities we need, and their money cost. |
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Chapter XXII. Foods and Poisons | 145 |
Concludes the subject of diet, and discusses the effect
upon the system of stimulants and narcotics. |
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Chapter XXIII. More About Health | 156 |
Discusses the subjects of breathing and ventilation,
clothing, bathing and sleep. |
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Chapter XXIV. Work and Play | 163 |
Deals with the question of exercise, both for the idle
and the overworked. |
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Chapter XXV. The Fasting Cure | 169 |
Deals with Nature's own remedy for disease, and how to make use of it. |
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Chapter XXVI. Breaking the Fast | 177 |
Discusses various methods of building up the body after a fast, especially the milk diet. |
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Chapter XXVII. Diseases and Cures | 182 |
Discusses some of the commoner human ailments, and what is known about their cause and cure. |
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INDEX VOLUME I |
PART THREE: THE BOOK OF LOVE | |
PAGE | |
Chapter XXVIII. The Reality of Marriage | 3 |
Discusses the sex-customs now existing in the world, and their relation to the ideal of monogamous love. |
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Chapter XXIX. The Development of Marriage | 8 |
Deals with the sex-relationship, its meaning and its
history, the stages of its development in human society. |
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Chapter XXX. Sex and Young America | 15 |
Discusses present-day sex arrangements, as they affect the future generation. |
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Chapter XXXI. Sex and the "smart Set" | 23 |
Portrays the moral customs of those who set the fashion in our present-day world. |
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Chapter XXXII. Sex and the Poor | 29 |
Discusses prostitution, the extent of its prevalence,
and the diseases which result from it. |
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Chapter XXXIII. Sex and Nature | 33 |
Maintains that our sex disorders are not the result of natural or physical disharmony. |
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Chapter XXXIV. Love and Economics | 36 |
Maintains that our sex disorders are of social origin,
due to the displacing of love by money as a motive in mating. |
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Chapter XXXV. Marriage and Money | 40 |
Discusses the causes of prostitution, and that higher form of prostitution known as the "marriage of convenience." |
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Chapter XXXVI. Love Versus Lust | 46 |
Discusses the sex impulse, its use and misuse; when it should be followed and when repressed. |
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Chapter XXXVII. Celibacy Versus Chastity | 51 |
The ideal of the repression of the sex-impulse, as
against the ideal of its guidance and cultivation. |
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Chapter XXXVIII. The Defense of Love | 55 |
Discusses passionate love, its sanction, its place in
life, and its preservation in marriage. |
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Chapter XXXIX. Birth Control | 60 |
Deals with the prevention of conception as one of the greatest of man's discoveries, releasing him from nature's enslavement, and placing the keys of life in his hands. |
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Chapter XL. Early Marriage | 66 |
Discusses love marriages, how they can be made, and the duty of parents in respect to them. |
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Chapter XLI. The Marriage Club | 71 |
Discusses how parents and elders may help the young to avoid unhappy marriages. |
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Chapter XLII. Education for Marriage | 75 |
Maintains that the art of love can be taught, and that we have the right and the duty to teach it. |
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Chapter XLIII. The Money Side of Marriage | 79 |
Deals with the practical side of the life partnership of matrimony. |
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Chapter XLIV. The Defense of Monogamy | 83 |
Discusses the permanence of love, and why we should endeavor to preserve it. |
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Chapter XLV. The Problem of Jealousy | 89 |
Discusses the question, to what extent one person may hold another to the pledge of love. |
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Chapter XLVI. The Problem of Divorce | 93 |
Defends divorce as a protection to monogamous love, and one of the means of preventing infidelity and prostitution. |
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Chapter XLVII. The Restriction of Divorce | 97 |
Discusses the circumstances under which society has the right to forbid divorce, or to impose limitations upon it. |
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PART FOUR: THE BOOK OF SOCIETY | |
Chapter XLVIII. The Ego and the World | 103 |
Discusses the beginning of consciousness, in the infant and in primitive man, and the problem of its adjustment to life. |
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Chapter XLVIX. Competition and Co-operation | 107 |
Discusses the relation of the adult to society, and the part which selfishness and unselfishness play in the development of social life. |
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Chapter L. Aristocracy and Democracy | 115 |
Discusses the idea of superior classes and races, and whether there is a natural basis for such a doctrine. |
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Chapter LI. Ruling Classes | 119 |
Deals with authority in human society, how it is
obtained, and what sanction it can claim. |
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Chapter LII. The Process of Social Evolution | 122 |
Discusses the series of changes through which human society has passed. |
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Chapter LIII. Industrial Evolution | 126 |
Examines the process of evolution in industry and the stage which it has so far reached. |
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Chapter LIV. The Class Struggle | 132 |
Discusses history as a battle-ground between ruling and subject classes, and the method and outcome of this struggle. |
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Chapter LV. The Capitalist System | 136 |
Shows how wealth is produced in modern society, and the effect of this system upon the minds of the workers. |
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Chapter LVI. The Capitalist Process | 142 |
How profits are made under the present industrial system and what becomes of them. |
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Chapter LVII. Hard Times | 145 |
Explains why capitalist prosperity is a spasmodic thing, and why abundant production brings distress instead of plenty. |
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Chapter LVIII. The Iron Ring | 148 |
Analyzes further the profit system, which strangles
production, and makes true prosperity impossible. |
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Chapter LIX. Foreign Markets | 151 |
Considers the efforts of capitalism to save itself by
marketing its surplus products abroad, and what results from these efforts. |
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Chapter LX. Capitalist War | 155 |
Shows how the competition for foreign markets leads nations automatically into war. |
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Chapter LXI. The Possibilities of Production | 158 |
Shows how much wealth we could produce if we tried and how we proved it when we had to. |
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Chapter LXII. The Cost of Competition | 162 |
Discusses the losses of friction in our productive
machine, those which are obvious and those which are hidden. |
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Chapter LXIII. Socialism and Syndicalism | 166 |
Discusses the idea of the management of industry by the state, and the idea of its management by the trade unions. |
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Chapter LXIV. Communism and Anarchism | 170 |
Considers the idea of goods owned in common, and the idea of a society without compulsion, and how these ideas have fared in Russia. |
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Chapter LXV. Social Revolution | 175 |
How the great change is coming in different industries, and how we may prepare to meet it. |
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Chapter LXVI. Confiscation Or Compensation | 179 |
Shall the workers buy out the capitalists? Can they afford to do it, and what will be the price? |
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Chapter LXVII. Expropriating the Expropriators | 183 |
Discusses the dictatorship of the proletariat, and its chances for success in the United States. |
|
Chapter LXVIII. The Problem of the Land | 188 |
Discusses the land values tax as a means of social
readjustment, and compares it with other programs. |
|
Chapter LXIX. The Control of Credit | 192 |
Deals with money, the part it plays in the restriction
of industry, and may play in the freeing of industry. |
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Chapter LXX. The Control of Industry | 198 |
Discusses various programs for the change from
industrial autocracy to industrial democracy. |
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Chapter LXXI. The New World | 202 |
Describes the co-operative commonwealth, beginning with its money aspects; the standard wage and its variations. |
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Chapter LXXII. Agricultural Production | 206 |
Discusses the land in the new world, and how we foster co-operative farming and co-operative homes. |
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Chapter LXXIII. Intellectual Production | 210 |
Discusses scientific, artistic, and religious
activities, as a superstructure built upon the foundation of the standard wage. |
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Chapter LXXIV. Mankind Remade | 215 |
Discusses human nature and its weaknesses, and what happens to these in the new world. |
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