
audiobook
The work opens with a sweeping meditation on how human thought shapes the fortunes of societies. It surveys the tangled relationship between self‑interest and the common good, tracing how institutions—from early political economies to religious reforms—have tried to steer personal desire toward collective welfare. By examining philosophy as a “second agency,” the author argues that reason can re‑educate self‑love, exposing the deeper bonds that unite humanity.
In the first section the writer maps out three principal forces—politics, philosophy, and religion—that can lift societies out of stagnation. He critiques the limited aims of conventional economics and highlights the reformist impulse that began with the Reformation, suggesting that true progress demands a fuller awareness of our duties and the span of our existence. The discussion remains grounded in practical concerns, inviting readers to consider how enlightened thought might gradually mend the evils that still grip the world.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (94K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2006-04-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

A 19th-century American Methodist minister, educator, and writer, he blended preaching, teaching, and public service in a life shaped by faith and the turmoil of the Civil War era. His story reaches from New England classrooms to the battlefields and camps of the South.
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