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New Ways of Thinking

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Title: New Ways of Thinking


1
New Ways of Thinking
  • Chapter 7
  • Section 4

2
  • Thinkers, such as Thomas Malthus and Adam Smith,
    tried to understand the staggering changes taking
    place in the early industrial age.
  • As heirs to the Enlightenment, these thinkers
    looked for natural laws that governed the world
    of business and economics.

3
Laissez-Faire Economics
  • During the Enlightenment, physiocrats argued that
    natural laws should be allowed to operate without
    interference.
  • As part of this philosophy they believed that
    government should not interfere in the free
    operation of the economy.
  • In the early 1800s, middle-class business leaders
    embraced this laissez-faire, or hands-off
    approach.

4
  • Adam Smith, the main prophet of laissez-faire
    economics, wrote a book entitled, The Wealth of
    Nations, in which he asserted that a free market
    the unregulated exchange of goods and services
    would come to help everyone, not just the rich.
  • The free market, Smith said, would produce more
    goods at lower prices, making them affordable by
    everyone.

5
  • Thomas Malthus grimly predicted that population
    would outpace the food supply.
  • He believed that as long as population kept
    increasing, the poor would suffer. He urged
    families to have fewer children.
  • During the early 1800s, many people accepted
    Malthuss views, but they proved to be too
    pessimistic. Although the population boom
    continued, the food supply grew even faster, and
    living conditions for the western world slowly
    improved.

6
  • David Ricardo, another British economist agreed
    with Malthus that the poor had too many children.
  • In his iron law of wages, Ricardo pointed out
    that when wages were high, families had more
    children. But more children meant a greater
    supply of labor, which led to lower wages and
    higher unemployment.
  • Neither Malthus nor Ricardo was a cruel man. Yet
    both opposed any government help for the poor.
    These supporters of laissez-fair economics
    believed that individuals could improve their
    life through thrift, hard work, and limiting the
    size of their families.

7
The Utilitarians
  • By 1800, Jeremy Bentham was preaching
    utilitarianism, the idea that the goal of society
    should be the greatest happiness for the
    greatest number of its citizens.
  • Bentham strongly supported individual freedom,
    which he believed guaranteed happiness.
  • Still, he saw the need for government to become
    involved under certain circumstances.

8
  • John Stuart Mill, a follower of Bentham, also
    argued that actions are right if they promote
    happiness and wrong if they cause pain.
  • He reexamined the idea that unrestricted
    competition in the free market was always good.
    Often, he said, it favored the strong over the
    weak.
  • While middle-class business and factory owners
    were entitled to increase their own happiness,
    therefore, government should prevent them from
    doing so in a manner that harmed workers. Mill
    further called for giving the vote to workers and
    women.

9
  • Most middle-class people rejected Mills ideas.
  • Only later in the 1800s were his views slowly
    accepted.
  • Todays democratic governments, however, have
    absorbed many ideas from John Stuart Mill and the
    utilitarians.

10
The Emergence of Socialism
  • While the champions of laissez-faire economics
    praised individual rights, other thinkers focused
    on the good of society in general.
  • They condemned the evils of industrial
    capitalism, which they believed had created a
    gulf between rich and poor.
  • To end poverty and injustice, they offered a
    radical solution socialism.

11
  • Under socialism, the people as a whole rather
    than private individuals would own and operate
    the means of production the farms, factories,
    railways, and other large businesses that
    produced and distributed goods.
  • Socialists wanted to develop a world in which
    society would operate for the benefit lf all
    members, rather than just for the wealthy.

12
  • The Utopians Early socialists who tried to build
    self-sufficient communities in which all work was
    shared and all property was owned in common. When
    there was no difference between rich and poor,
    they felt, fighting between people would
    disappear.
  • Although many socialists saw the Utopians as
    dreamers, Robert Owen set up a model community to
    put his ideas into practice.

13
  • Robert Owen became a successful mill owner.
    Unlike others, he refused to use child labor and
    he encouraged the organization of labor unions.
  • He built homes for workers, opened a school for
    children, and generally treated employees well.
    He showed that an employer could offer decent
    living and working conditions and still run a
    profitable business.
  • By the 1820s, many people were visiting Owens
    community to study his reforms.

14
The Scientific Socialism of Karl Marx
  • In the 1840s Karl Marx, a German philosopher
    condemned the ideas of the Utopians as
    unrealistic idealism.
  • He put forward a new theory, scientific
    socialism, which he claimed was based on the
    scientific study of history.
  • Forced to leave Germany, Marx lived in Paris for
    awhile but finally settled in London, England.

15
  • Karl Marx and his friend, Friederich Engels
    published a pamphlet entitled The Communist
    Manifesto in 1848.
  • They described communism as a form of socialism
    that sees class struggle between employers and
    employees as unavoidable.
  • Their philosophy became known as Marxism.

16
Marxism
  • In The Communist Manifesto, Marx theorized that
    economics was the driving force in history.
  • The entire course of history, he argued was the
    history of class struggles between the haves
    and the have-nots. The haves have always
    owned the means of production and thus controlled
    society and all its wealth.
  • Marx said, the haves were the bourgeoisie
    (factory owning middle-class), and the
    have-nots were the proletariat, or working
    class.

17
  • Marx believed there would have to be a modern
    class struggle between the bourgeoisie and
    proletariat. He predicted the proletariat would
    be triumphant.
  • It would then take control of the means of
    production and set up a classless, communist
    society. Such a society would mark the end of the
    struggles people had endured throughout history,
    because wealth and power would be equally shared.
  • Marx despised capitalism. He believed it created
    prosperity for only a few and poverty for many.

18
  • Looking Ahead
  • Marxs ideas would never be practiced exactly as
    he imagined them.
  • Although he predicted the misery of the
    proletariat would touch off a world revolution,
    by 1900 the efforts of reformers and governments
    led to improved conditions for the working class.

19
  • Revolutions
  • In the late 1800s, Russian socialists embraced
    Marxism, and the Russian Revolution of 1917 set
    up a communist-inspired government.
  • For much of the 1900s revolutionaries around the
    world would adapt Marxist ideas to their own
    needs. Independence leaders in Asia, Latin
    America, and Africa would turn to Marxism.
  • By the 1990s, however, nearly every nation would
    incorporate elements of free-market capitalism.
    To many people, Adam Smiths ideas seemed to be
    of more lasting value than those of Karl Marx.
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