About This Book
The author examines how imprecise political language enables revolutionary agitation and redefines key concepts—private property, justice, equality, and freedom—while critiquing common democratic and socialist assumptions. He analyzes socialism and communism, assesses education and social reform as contributors to unrest and to remedies, and explores physiological and social roots of agitation. Arguing that conceptual confusion undermines social cohesion, he proposes an alternative grounded in enduring institutions and clarified principles instead of rhetorical catchphrases, aiming to redirect political debate toward precise definitions and practical solutions.
About the Author
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