Human liberation requires an affluent, egalitarian, and democratic society in which man is free from domination by nature's caprice and, in all spheres of life, free from domination by other men. The industrial revolution and technological advances of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries held great promise for human liberation. The burden of toil and drudgery and the domination of man by nature's caprice began lifting in Europe and in some of her colonies. Human safety and security came within reach because poverty was being eliminated. Liberation on the material plane was at hand. However, at the closing of the twentieth century, the liberation process has been slowed down, if not thwarted. In most of the third world, not even the burden of toil and drudgery and the domination of man by a capricious nature have been lifted. In the affluent United States, on the other hand, material security and safety is widespread, but it still does not reach the lowest stratum. Domination by nature through human poverty continues in the affluent West even though it could be eliminated. Nevertheless, in the West, domination by nature is no longer an insurmountable physical datum.
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1 May 1984
Review Article|
May 01 1984
Human Liberation: Workplace Reform as the Next Step in Social Evolution
William M. Dugger
William M. Dugger
De Paul University
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6712
Print ISSN: 0306-8293
© MCB UP Limited
1984
International Journal of Social Economics (1984) 11 (5): 29–39.
Citation
Dugger WM (1984), "Human Liberation: Workplace Reform as the Next Step in Social Evolution". International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 11 No. 5 pp. 29–39, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb013970
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