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Latest comment: 18 years ago2 comments2 people in discussion
Upon reading the single paragraph presently written on this book, I must object that it perpetuates a stereotype generalization about its content that is largely misleading. Herbert Spencer was attacked quite heavily for being a "Social Darwinist", but Social Statics is hardly a major example of that thinking. Indeed, it was for sometime an important and dominant Liberal tract advancing cogent arguments for many ideas such as Freedom of Speech and Universal Suffrage. As written the article deserves a non-NPOV warning. -- 24.180.28.15604:01, 16 April 2006 (UTC)Reply
Could you offer specific recommendations or critiques? I'm aware of those readings of Spencer to which you refer, but I don't see anything particularly misleading in this summary. The historical counterexamples you offer (freedom of speech, universal sufferage) seem to counter examples that aren't actually presented in the article (presumably laissez faire economic policies). Indeed, most of the article is a rather extended quote. Perhaps if you feel this quote is out of context you could supply another from the book which would remedy this? I've removed the NPOV until then, --129.174.109.21716:55, 26 June 2006 (UTC)Reply