
audiobook
The opening pages lay out a stark portrait of nineteenth‑century society, juxtaposing the extremes of wealth and want, liberty and oppression, knowledge and ignorance. By weaving together vivid observations of daily life—from starving children rummaging through refuse to the opulent excesses of the privileged—the author exposes how the forces of competition and survival, framed by Darwinian thought, intersect with the rising calls for collective solidarity. He argues that the very structures that promise progress often deepen the chasm between the affluent few and the destitute many.
In the first act, the narrative moves from description to critique, questioning whether the prevailing social order truly serves humanity’s better nature. Drawing on stark statistics and personal anecdotes, the writer challenges listeners to consider how economic and political systems shape human destiny, and whether a more cooperative, socialist vision might alleviate the suffering he so meticulously details. The stage is set for a probing debate about the moral responsibilities of a modern society still wrestling with the legacies of its past.
Language
de
Duration
~2 hours (120K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2007-03-06
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1824–1899
Best known for arguing that mind and life could be explained through matter and natural laws, this German physician and writer became one of the most widely read popularizers of scientific materialism in the 19th century. His work stirred fierce debate far beyond medical circles.
View all books