Philosophy And Political Economy in Some of Their Historical Relations

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One difficulty is that to give relief without labour is contrary to the first principle of civil society, individual independence, and to give it for labour is to increase the overproduction of goods which (in conjunction with the want of corresponding produc- tive consumers) was the very cause of the evil at first. For all its overflowing abundance of wealth, civil society seems too poor 1 to cope with the excess of poverty and the growth of the proletariate. We see that in E ngland the Poor R...ate and indiscriminate private charities undermine 1 He says " too poor in the sort of property ( Vermogen) trvat is peculiar to it " which may mean saleable goods.
HEGEL. 315 the body corporate itself. In Scotland, to prevent the demoralizing influence of legal relief, the extremely poor are left to resort to begging (§ 245). The dialectic, which has shown itself in this tendency to the growth of a proletariate over against great fortunes, pushes civil societies beyond their own bounds, and leads them to colonization, either sporadic or systematic, in order to find customers and subsistence (§ 246, cf 248).


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