In The Revolt of Labour Against Civilisation, W. H. V. Reade questions whether industry and wealth truly serve the common good.
The work surveys the clash between labour and capital, arguing that the pursuit of wealth has reshaped society and threaten to erode the idea of civilization itself. It examines how wealth, prestige, and power shift across occupations, and why a simple promise of progress may mask deeper social costs.
Readers are invited to think about justice, work, and the role of the state. The author questions common beliefs about money, merit, and the right way to balance individual opportunity with the community’s welfare, inviting a reconsideration of long-held ideas about happiness and fairness.
- How wealth and work influence social status and value in modern life
- Critiques of both employers and trade unions and their impact on society
- Connections between happiness, imagination, and the uses of wealth
- A provocative argument for rethinking policies that shape industry and civilization
Ideal for readers exploring the ethics of work, economic philosophy, and the tension between progress and civilization.