Chapter 23 of Man vs. The Welfare State; extensive review of Spencer's The Man versus the State comparing the 1880s to the contemporary (late 1960s) social and political environment
The Man Versus the State is a work of political theory by Herbert Spencer. It was first published in book form in 1884 by Williams and Norgate, London, from articles published earlier that year in The Contemporary Review. The book consists of four main chapters: "The New Toryism", "The Coming Slavery", "The Sins of Legislators" and "The Great Political Superstition". In this book, English libertarian sociologist Herbert Spencer sees a statist corruption appearing within the liberal ideological framework, and warns of what he calls "the coming slavery". He argues that liberalism, which liberated the world from slavery and feudalism, was undergoing a transformation. Its new love for the state would put liberalism behind a movement to create a new despotism that would be worse than the old.
Articles
Chapter 23 of Man vs. The Welfare State; extensive review of Spencer's The Man versus the State comparing the 1880s to the contemporary (late 1960s) social and political environment
Biographical essay
Reviews
Review of Liberty Classics (1981) edition of The Man Versus the State
Books
by Liberty Fund, The Man Versus the State, Jun 1982
Contents: The New Toryism - The Coming Slavery - The Sins of Legislators - The Great Political Superstition; electronic version of the 1992 Liberty Fund edition available at the Library of Economics and Liberty
- ISBN 0913966975: Hardcover, Liberty Fund, Inc., 1982
- ISBN 1117668312: Hardcover, BiblioLife, 2009
- Kindle Book available at Amazon
- ISBN 0913966983: Paperback, Liberty Fund, Inc., 2009
- ISBN 1409982416: Paperback, Dodo Press, 2009
The introductory paragraph uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Man Versus the State" as of 19 Jan 2022, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.