The political economy of Edmund Burke the role of property in his thought
The basic theme of the book is that Burke saw property, and in particular the great masses of landed property, as the major check on the expansive power of the state, whether that meant the power of the Crown in Britain or the power of the revolutionary state in France. Property was, by the same tok...
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Format: | UnknownFormat |
Sprache: | eng |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York
Fordham Univ. Press
1995
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Schlagworte: |
Burke, Edmund <1729-1797> - Contribution à l'économie politique
> Burke, Edmund <1729-1797> - Contribution à la science politique
> Burke, Edmund <1729-1797>
> Burke, Edmund
> Geschichte 1700-1800
> Propriété
> Économie politique - Grande-Bretagne - Histoire - 18ème siècle
> Geschichte
> Politische Wissenschaft
> Wirtschaft
> Economics
> History
> Political science
> Property
> Politische Ökonomie
> Eigentum
> Großbritannien
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Zusammenfassung: | The basic theme of the book is that Burke saw property, and in particular the great masses of landed property, as the major check on the expansive power of the state, whether that meant the power of the Crown in Britain or the power of the revolutionary state in France. Property was, by the same token, the support of the intermediary institutions of society. He did not, however, want property to be monopolized by any one class in society. Access to property was a major need for Irish Catholics, who were deprived of it under the penal laws in their own country, as was the protection of the property of the people of India against the depredations of the East India Company Burke certainly regarded property as the spur to industry and the source of national prosperity. But primarily he regarded it as the material base of constitutional liberty under a government of limited powers and, more broadly, of a civilized and cultivated society. He was not the bourgeois capitalist that C. B. Macpherson makes him out to be, or the hired philosopher of the Whig oligarchy depicted by J. B. Plumb and Frank O'Gorman. Nor did he "declare war on the poor," as Gertrude Himmelfarb charged in her The Idea of Poverty. Rightly or wrongly, he admired paternalistic government by the rich and virtuous (as he thought the Rockingham Whigs to be), who would govern as trustees for the benefit of the whole people. In short, Burke was a Whig, not a nineteenth-century Manchester liberal or Social Darwinist |
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Beschreibung: | XI, 185 S. |
ISBN: | 0823215903 0-8232-1590-3 0823215911 0-8232-1591-1 |