Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Moses—Henry George's Inspiration

View through CrossRef
Abstract. Henry George delivered his famous “Moses” lecture in 1878, just one year prior to the publication of his masterwork. Progress and Poverty. The many parallels in the thinking of both George and Moses suggest that George may have been greatly inspired by Moses. George appreciated Moses’concern with improving this world rather than the hereafter. Moses, like George, advocated a minimum role for government. Moses proposed a thoroughly equitable distribution of the land which would generate fair taxes and avoid the exploitation so denounced by George. Land accumulation by the few would be prevented by requiring the return of ownership to the original owners every fifty years. George, the humanitarian, is also sympathetic with Mosaic reforms restoring human dignity such as the cancellation of oppressive debt every seventh year, and relief from drudgery every sabbath day and sabbatical year.
Title: Moses—Henry George's Inspiration
Description:
Abstract.
Henry George delivered his famous “Moses” lecture in 1878, just one year prior to the publication of his masterwork.
Progress and Poverty.
The many parallels in the thinking of both George and Moses suggest that George may have been greatly inspired by Moses.
George appreciated Moses’concern with improving this world rather than the hereafter.
Moses, like George, advocated a minimum role for government.
Moses proposed a thoroughly equitable distribution of the land which would generate fair taxes and avoid the exploitation so denounced by George.
Land accumulation by the few would be prevented by requiring the return of ownership to the original owners every fifty years.
George, the humanitarian, is also sympathetic with Mosaic reforms restoring human dignity such as the cancellation of oppressive debt every seventh year, and relief from drudgery every sabbath day and sabbatical year.

Related Results

Henry Lives! Learning from Lawson Fandom
Henry Lives! Learning from Lawson Fandom
Since his death in 1922, Henry Lawson’s “spirit” has been kept alive by admirers across Australia. Over the last century, Lawson’s reputation in the academy has fluctuated yet fan ...
The Story of Moses and Pharaoh in a Structural Anthropology Approach
The Story of Moses and Pharaoh in a Structural Anthropology Approach
This study examined the story of Moses and Pharaoh as one of the Islamic narrative discourses in the Qur’an. Structural anthropology Claude Lévi-Strauss was used to analyze the sto...
Henry Mayhew and the Mayhew Brothers
Henry Mayhew and the Mayhew Brothers
Henry Mayhew and his brothers were writers in the early and mid-Victorian periods. The most famous of the siblings was Henry Mayhew. Henry and his brothers were born in an upper-mi...
Roads less travelled by—Pleistocene piracy in Washington’s northwestern Channeled Scabland
Roads less travelled by—Pleistocene piracy in Washington’s northwestern Channeled Scabland
ABSTRACT The Pleistocene Okanogan lobe of Cordilleran ice in north-central Washington State dammed Columbia River to pond glacial Lake Columbia and divert the river ...
Unique Representations of Moses in the Works of Harriet Martineau, Charlotte Brontë, and George Eliot
Unique Representations of Moses in the Works of Harriet Martineau, Charlotte Brontë, and George Eliot
Abstract This article uses two methods to examine George Eliot's poem “The Death of Moses,” which has not yet been fully analyzed. One is the comparative analysis of...
The Annotated Works of Henry George
The Annotated Works of Henry George
Henry George (1839–1897) rose to fame as a social reformer and economist amid the industrial and intellectual turbulence of the late nineteenth century. His best-selling Progress a...
Teologi Berhala Berbasis Keluaran 32:1-14
Teologi Berhala Berbasis Keluaran 32:1-14
This article aims to discuss the life of faith of the Israelites as God's chosen people, whether they were loyal to God or to Baal, especially on the journey to the promised land. ...

Back to Top