Abstract. Herbert Spencer (1820–1903) believed that Victorian Britain was moving toward a society of total regimentation (“slavery”). This movement was part of a cosmic process of evolution and dissolution. While the long-run (but not ultimate) destination of society was a “higher ” form of social organization based on voluntary and complex interpersonal relationships, the immediate tendency was retrograde—a movement away from the liberation of mankind from the bondage of previous eras. This Article explores (1) the reasons for the retrograde movement, (2) its “inevitability, ” and (3) the role of ideas in the process. The general conclusion is that in an effort to explain the general movement of social institutions and practices, Spencer d...
The most conspicuous characteristics of Spencer's educational thought is the consistent adaptation o...
Spencer's use of biological concepts and metaphors in his theory of social evolution and laissez-fai...
Spencer's use of biological concepts and metaphors in his theory of social evolution and laissez-fai...
Abstract. Herbert Spencer (1820–1903) believed that Victorian Britain was moving toward a society of...
Abstract. Herbert Spencer (1820–1903) believed that Victorian Britain was moving toward a society of...
British sociology had its nineteenth-century origins in three streams of Victorian social thought. F...
Herbert Spencer was a pre-eminent social and political writer of the Victorian Age. His works had a ...
The philosopher Herbert Spencer (1820-1903) is little remembered today, but in the late nineteenth c...
This volume makes a compelling case for the continued relevance and significance of Herbert Spencer ...
This volume makes a compelling case for the continued relevance and significance of Herbert Spencer ...
Herbert Spencer (1820-1903) was one of the most influential thinkers in the late nineteenth century ...
This volume makes a compelling case for the continued relevance and significance of Herbert Spencer ...
This article compares notions of progress and evolution in the social theories of Freud and Herbert ...
The aim of the study is to make a contribution to the empirical history of sociology by supplementin...
The aim of the study is to make a contribution to the empirical history of sociology by supplementin...
The most conspicuous characteristics of Spencer's educational thought is the consistent adaptation o...
Spencer's use of biological concepts and metaphors in his theory of social evolution and laissez-fai...
Spencer's use of biological concepts and metaphors in his theory of social evolution and laissez-fai...
Abstract. Herbert Spencer (1820–1903) believed that Victorian Britain was moving toward a society of...
Abstract. Herbert Spencer (1820–1903) believed that Victorian Britain was moving toward a society of...
British sociology had its nineteenth-century origins in three streams of Victorian social thought. F...
Herbert Spencer was a pre-eminent social and political writer of the Victorian Age. His works had a ...
The philosopher Herbert Spencer (1820-1903) is little remembered today, but in the late nineteenth c...
This volume makes a compelling case for the continued relevance and significance of Herbert Spencer ...
This volume makes a compelling case for the continued relevance and significance of Herbert Spencer ...
Herbert Spencer (1820-1903) was one of the most influential thinkers in the late nineteenth century ...
This volume makes a compelling case for the continued relevance and significance of Herbert Spencer ...
This article compares notions of progress and evolution in the social theories of Freud and Herbert ...
The aim of the study is to make a contribution to the empirical history of sociology by supplementin...
The aim of the study is to make a contribution to the empirical history of sociology by supplementin...
The most conspicuous characteristics of Spencer's educational thought is the consistent adaptation o...
Spencer's use of biological concepts and metaphors in his theory of social evolution and laissez-fai...
Spencer's use of biological concepts and metaphors in his theory of social evolution and laissez-fai...