Understand how labor and capital shape civilization—and what that means for workers today.
This book explains why labor and the instruments of production depend on each other and how markets, rights, and government help them work together for mutual benefit.
In clear terms, it shows how civilization raises productivity, why capital comes from saving, and how incentives and rules steer cooperative work. It ties these ideas to real questions about wages, profits, and the future of workers in a changing economy.
- How the market sets wages and profits through demand and supply
- Why the instruments of labor matter and how they are funded
- What a cooperative labor organization could look like and how it might be governed
- How innovations in production affect workers, costs, and broader society
Ideal for readers of economic history, political economy, and anyone curious about how labor, capital, and civilization intersect to shape everyday life.