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The State as Utopia [electronic resource] : Continental Approaches / edited by Jürgen Georg Backhaus.

By: Backhaus, Jürgen Georg [editor.].
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: The European Heritage in Economics and the Social Sciences: 9Publisher: New York, NY : Springer New York, 2011Description: X, 210 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781441975003.Subject(s): Economics | Economics -- Methodology | Social sciences | Political science | Economics/Management Science | Methodology and the History of Economic Thought | Political Science | Social Sciences, generalDDC classification: 330 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introduction -- A Demand-Revealing Utopia -- Economic City-Planning and Environmental Proposals by Plato in the City of Atlantis and of the Laws -- Property in a Utopian State, Informed by Ideas of Pufendorf and Locke -- John Stuart Mill and the Utopian Tradition -- The State as Utopia: Some Thoughts on Theocracy -- Justi's Concrete Utopia -- The Kingdom of Ophir – a "Realistic Utopia" -- Is Montaigne a Utopian?- Labour in Utopian Socialism -- Der Zukunftsstaat - Carl Ballod's Vision of a Leisure-oriented Socialism -- Developing Society According to Man's Development -- The Utopian Element in the Formation of Doctrines on the State in German Staatswissenschaften -- Utopia – Johann Peter Süßmilch and the Devine Order -- Eugen Dühring and Post-Utopian Socialism.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This book examines utopias in classical political economy and is based on the papers presented by leading scholars at the 22nd Heilbronn Symposium in the Economics and the Social Sciences. The book focuses on the tension between the State and utopia (the State as utopia vs. utopia instead of a state). The contributors also study the question of whether seafaring and landlocked states visualize the commonwealth differently and develop different utopias, and it is concluded they do not. The volume therefore follows the refutation of the Schumpeterian Hypothesis that more concentrated industries stimulate innovation. Though the hypothesis is refuted it still remains important, the chapters argue, because it charts out an entire research program, serves as a benchmark of definite public and private sector boundaries, and defines the grammar of discourse for constitutional economic policy in OECD states. These themes are explored in detail through contributions by economists, philosophers, and social historians. The contributors examine utopias hitherto never or rarely reviewed in the English language, making this book of interest to students and scholars in economics, political science and the history of economic thought.
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Introduction -- A Demand-Revealing Utopia -- Economic City-Planning and Environmental Proposals by Plato in the City of Atlantis and of the Laws -- Property in a Utopian State, Informed by Ideas of Pufendorf and Locke -- John Stuart Mill and the Utopian Tradition -- The State as Utopia: Some Thoughts on Theocracy -- Justi's Concrete Utopia -- The Kingdom of Ophir – a "Realistic Utopia" -- Is Montaigne a Utopian?- Labour in Utopian Socialism -- Der Zukunftsstaat - Carl Ballod's Vision of a Leisure-oriented Socialism -- Developing Society According to Man's Development -- The Utopian Element in the Formation of Doctrines on the State in German Staatswissenschaften -- Utopia – Johann Peter Süßmilch and the Devine Order -- Eugen Dühring and Post-Utopian Socialism.

This book examines utopias in classical political economy and is based on the papers presented by leading scholars at the 22nd Heilbronn Symposium in the Economics and the Social Sciences. The book focuses on the tension between the State and utopia (the State as utopia vs. utopia instead of a state). The contributors also study the question of whether seafaring and landlocked states visualize the commonwealth differently and develop different utopias, and it is concluded they do not. The volume therefore follows the refutation of the Schumpeterian Hypothesis that more concentrated industries stimulate innovation. Though the hypothesis is refuted it still remains important, the chapters argue, because it charts out an entire research program, serves as a benchmark of definite public and private sector boundaries, and defines the grammar of discourse for constitutional economic policy in OECD states. These themes are explored in detail through contributions by economists, philosophers, and social historians. The contributors examine utopias hitherto never or rarely reviewed in the English language, making this book of interest to students and scholars in economics, political science and the history of economic thought.

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