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Why Not Socialism?
A01=Gerald A. Cohen
Attempt
Attractiveness
Author_Gerald A. Cohen
Basic income
Behalf
Call option
Camping
Campsite
Capital asset
Capitalism
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Ceteris paribus
Commodity
Competition (economics)
Consumer
Cooking
Criticism
Disadvantage
Distributive justice
Dividend
Economic inequality
Economic Life
Economic planning
Economics
Economist
Employment
Entitlement
Entrepreneurship
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Equal opportunity
Equality of outcome
Fishing
Fishing rod
Generosity
Greed and fear
Incentive
Income
Industrialisation
Inference
Institution
Invention
Joseph Carens
Laborer
Market economy
Market mechanism
Market price
Market socialism
Marketing
Modernity
Multi-tendency
Obstacle
Philosopher
Politics
Predation
Provision (contracting)
Regime
Requirement
Result
Selfishness
Social liberalism
Social relation
Social technology
Socialism
Socialist economics
Socialist society (Labour Party)
Stock market
Tax
Their Lives
Trade-off
Treating
Utopia
Voucher
Welfare state
Product details
- ISBN 9780691143613
- Weight: 113g
- Dimensions: 102 x 152mm
- Publication Date: 13 Sep 2009
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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Is socialism desirable? Is it even possible? In this concise book, one of the world's leading political philosophers presents with clarity and wit a compelling moral case for socialism and argues that the obstacles in its way are exaggerated. There are times, G. A. Cohen notes, when we all behave like socialists. On a camping trip, for example, campers wouldn't dream of charging each other to use a soccer ball or for fish that they happened to catch. Campers do not give merely to get, but relate to each other in a spirit of equality and community. Would such socialist norms be desirable across society as a whole? Why not? Whole societies may differ from camping trips, but it is still attractive when people treat each other with the equal regard that such trips exhibit. But, however desirable it may be, many claim that socialism is impossible. Cohen writes that the biggest obstacle to socialism isn't, as often argued, intractable human selfishness--it's rather the lack of obvious means to harness the human generosity that is there. Lacking those means, we rely on the market.
But there are many ways of confining the sway of the market: there are desirable changes that can move us toward a socialist society in which, to quote Albert Einstein, humanity has "overcome and advanced beyond the predatory stage of human development."
G. A. Cohen (1941-2009) was emeritus fellow of All Souls College, University of Oxford. His books include "Karl Marx's Theory of History: A Defence" (Princeton), "If You're an Egalitarian, How Come You're So Rich?", and "Rescuing Justice and Equality".
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