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The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind

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Chapter 7 the organisation of work. Chapter 8 offers an original analysis of the psychology of work. Chapters 9 and 10 analyse money, finance, and economic inequality. Chapter 11 is devoted to the social and economic role of women. Chapter 12 depicts government and the military. Chapter 13 discusses the problem of races, rejecting segregation, racism, and eugenics. Chapter 14 discusses sport, art, and entertainment. Chapter 15 analyses problems of religion, education, and social discipline. Chapter 16 addresses the future prospects of humanity.
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religious control, and it is still imperfectly and doubtfully released." Wells has doubts about the role played by universities, attached as they are to religious institutions and wealthy interests. But he has high hopes for extra-scholastic education, including newspapers, literature, and encyclopaedias. Ultimately he hopes for "a recasting of schools to meet the needs of a new education," helped or controlled by "a world government."
22: 222:(1929). Wells conceived of the three parts of his trilogy as, respectively, "a survey of history, of the science of life, and of existing conditions." Intended as an unprecedented "picture of all mankind to-day" in all its manifold activities, he called it "the least finished work . . . because it is the most novel." He hoped the volumes would play a role in the 352:: (1) the peasant; (2) the nomad; (3) the priest. "The first type is acquisitive, tenacious, and preservative; the second is rapacious and consumes; the third professes to be more or less aloof from possession and gain, and to carry on the service of the community for satisfaction of a quite different type." Wells seriously entertains the proposal of 356:
that the "money manipulator" may be "a new type whose primary delight is domination and oppression through relative gain" but concludes that if this is so, "the conception pervading this book . . . is unsound" and "here is nothing for it but . . . a class war against the rich and the able
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is divided into sixteen chapters following an introduction explaining the work's conception. The historical development of human mastery over matter and energy occupies Chapters 1–3. Chapter 4 is on agriculture, Chapter 5 on clothing and shelter. Chapter 6 describes the distribution of goods and
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What hope Wells has for the prospects of humanity rests primarily on human educability. "Every human being is to some extent an educable creature." Religion's social role has been to a large degree educational; moreover, "ducation has been the last field of intellectual activity to pass out of
345:, which he regards as susceptible of education. "Beneath the material processes of economics lies the social idea; its driving force is will. The clearer the idea, the better organized the will in the personas of our species, the more hopeful and successful the working of the human ant-hill." 128: 365:
Wells's treatment of contemporary political institutions is aggressively satirical, but he attributes their shortcomings to their need to accommodate the biological heritage human beings have inherited to solve the problem of what he calls "assent," or legitimation.
329:, when man "became very rapidly indeed an unprecedented species." For Wells, the adaptation of the "very imperfect instrument" of the human mind to new and developing possibilities is the essence of humanity's economic problem. 276:
restrained sales and Wells's optimistic utopianism struck many as passé and naïve in the increasingly violent political climate of the 1930s. When published in the United States in 1936, the book was retitled
246:, Wells worked with collaborators. Hugh P. Vowles and Edmund Cressey agreed to work with him on the book in 1928, but Vowles's work did not satisfy Wells. A bitter wrangle ensued in which the 1298: 1221: 1516: 777: 250:
became involved, to Wells's chagrin. In early 1929 he overcame the discouragement these difficulties caused and resumed work on the book, with the help of
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Wells proposes that there are three fundamental types of persona that differ in many ways, but in particular in their attitude toward
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Wells had great difficulty devising a comprehensive book discussing the world's economic life from a psychological point of view.
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Humans are "economic animals" because they prepare and store food socially. This important development occurred in the
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to establish a progressive world government that he had been promoting since the mid-1920s.
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sold relatively well (17,000 copies in England in the first month alone). But the
251: 1671: 1656: 1326: 1200: 1172: 1130: 817: 673: 449:, where he also pointed out that the conception of the book had taken two years. 326: 301: 259: 207: 141: 21: 312:, the first writer to envision the possibilities of modern encyclopaedias. 1432: 349: 333:
Satisfying the demands of the persona is the fundamental human enterprise
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because they seem to Wells to be essentially linked to his enterprise:
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Two historical figures are praised near the beginning and the end of
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had at various times more than a dozen working titles (such as
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is the final work of a trilogy of which the first volumes were
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The book was translated in German in 1932, with the title
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Travels of a Republican Radical in Search of Hot Water
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The stupidity of contemporary political institutions
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Wells: Desperately Mortal: A Biography 55:"The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind" 1352:The Country of the Blind and Other Stories 665: 651: 643: 618:(London: William Heinemann, 1932), p. 777. 605:(London: William Heinemann, 1932), p. 725. 592:(London: William Heinemann, 1932), p. 715. 553:(London: William Heinemann, 1932), p. 315. 540:(London: William Heinemann, 1932), p. 299. 406:(London: William Heinemann, 1932), p. 812. 126: 121:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 119: 1320:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 632:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 616:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 603:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 590:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 577:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 564:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 551:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 538:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 527:(London: William Heinemann, 1932), p. 64. 525:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 514:(London: William Heinemann, 1932), p. 30. 512:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 432:(London: William Heinemann, 1932), p. 26. 430:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 417:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 404:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 298:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 290:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 270:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 236:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 203:The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind 106:Learn how and when to remove this message 419:(London: William Heinemann, 1932), p. 1. 1545:The Queer Story of Brownlow's Newspaper 1373:The Stolen Bacillus and Other Incidents 462:(Simon and Schuster, 1973), pp. 359–63. 395: 42:Please improve this article by adding 266:also offered substantial assistance. 7: 279:The Outline of Man's Work and Wealth 1366:Select Conversations with an Uncle 994:Mr. Blettsworthy on Rampole Island 14: 1285:The Story of a Great Schoolmaster 1145:An Englishman Looks at the World 499:H.G. Wells: Another Kind of Life 20: 1634:The Man Who Could Work Miracles 1517:The Man Who Could Work Miracles 635:, complete text of the book in 501:(Peter Owen, 2010), pp. 289–90. 946:The Secret Places of the Heart 1: 1359:The Plattner Story and Others 1215:Mind at the End of Its Tether 978:The World of William Clissold 458:Norman and Jeanne Mackenzie, 44:secondary or tertiary sources 1672:Simon Wells (great-grandson) 1278:A Short History of the World 914:Mr. Britling Sees It Through 874:The Wife of Sir Isaac Harman 1580:A Story of the Days to Come 1152:Experiment in Autobiography 1138:The Discovery of the Future 1018:The Shape of Things to Come 1002:The Autocracy of Mr. Parham 714:The Island of Doctor Moreau 441:As witnessed by his friend 370:The importance of education 1742: 1387:Twelve Stories and a Dream 1313:The Way the World Is Going 1082:Babes in the Darkling Wood 970:Christina Alberta's Father 1594:Triumphs of a Taxidermist 762:The First Men in the Moon 680: 125: 1601:The Truth About Pyecraft 1587:A Story of the Stone Age 1503:Mr. Ledbetter's Vacation 1440:The Country of the Blind 1412:The Argonauts of the Air 1124:Certain Personal Matters 1098:You Can't Be Too Careful 906:The Research Magnificent 802:In the Days of the Comet 1510:The Lord of the Dynamos 1380:Tales of Space and Time 834:The History of Mr Polly 460:H.G. Wells: A Biography 256:Alexander Carr-Saunders 1726:Doubleday, Doran books 1711:1931 non-fiction books 1482:The Empire of the Ants 1257:The Outline of History 1187:God the Invisible King 1050:The Camford Visitation 1010:The Bulpington of Blup 866:The Passionate Friends 746:When the Sleeper Wakes 213:The Outline of History 31:relies excessively on 1667:Joseph Wells (father) 1475:A Dream of Armageddon 1426:The Chronic Argonauts 1334:A Year of Prophesying 1264:Russia in the Shadows 1208:Mankind in the Making 1180:The Future in America 1166:First and Last Things 1090:All Aboard for Ararat 738:The War of the Worlds 304:, a precursor of the 230:Genesis and reception 1721:Books by H. G. Wells 1608:A Vision of Judgment 1468:The Door in the Wall 1292:This Misery of Boots 922:The Soul of a Bishop 754:Love and Mr Lewisham 722:The Wheels of Chance 285:Organization of work 240:The Anatomy of Money 1677:H. G. Wells Society 1524:The New Accelerator 1454:A Deal in Ostriches 1271:The Science of Life 1250:The Open Conspiracy 1236:The New World Order 850:The New Machiavelli 706:The Wonderful Visit 497:Michael Sherborne, 244:The Science of Life 219:The Science of Life 122: 1662:Anthony West (son) 1538:The Plattner Story 1496:The Land Ironclads 1419:The Beautiful Suit 1306:War and the Future 1243:New Worlds for Old 1194:In the Fourth Year 1058:Apropos of Dolores 1026:The Croquet Player 882:The World Set Free 842:The Sleeper Awakes 810:The War in the Air 341:'s concept of the 316:Overarching themes 248:Society of Authors 132:First edition (UK) 1698: 1697: 1531:The Pearl of Love 1461:The Diamond Maker 730:The Invisible Man 199: 198: 170:William Heinemann 160:Political economy 116: 115: 108: 90: 1733: 938:The Undying Fire 698:The Time Machine 667: 660: 653: 644: 619: 612: 606: 599: 593: 586: 580: 573: 567: 560: 554: 547: 541: 534: 528: 521: 515: 508: 502: 495: 489: 484:David C. 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Smith, 469: 463: 456: 450: 439: 433: 426: 420: 413: 407: 400: 274:Great Depression 216:(1919–1920) and 183:Publication date 175:Doubleday, Doran 130: 123: 111: 104: 100: 97: 91: 89: 48: 24: 16: 1741: 1740: 1736: 1735: 1734: 1732: 1731: 1730: 1716:Economics books 1701: 1700: 1699: 1694: 1688:Time After Time 1652:Political views 1640: 1613: 1573:The Stolen Body 1559:The Sea Raiders 1447:The Crystal Egg 1405:Æpyornis Island 1392: 1339: 1229:The New America 1159:The Fate of Man 1104: 1074:The Holy Terror 794:A Modern Utopia 685: 676: 671: 627: 622: 613: 609: 600: 596: 587: 583: 574: 570: 561: 557: 548: 544: 535: 531: 522: 518: 509: 505: 496: 492: 483: 479: 470: 466: 457: 453: 443:Charlie Chaplin 440: 436: 427: 423: 414: 410: 401: 397: 393: 381: 372: 363: 354:Frederick Soddy 337:Wells endorses 335: 323: 318: 287: 258:on demography. 232: 224:open conspiracy 184: 173: 133: 112: 101: 95: 92: 49: 47: 41: 37:primary sources 25: 12: 11: 5: 1739: 1737: 1729: 1728: 1723: 1718: 1713: 1703: 1702: 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As in 166:Publisher 1566:The Star 1433:The Cone 1034:Brynhild 858:Marriage 350:property 148:Language 1645:Related 343:persona 151:English 80:scholar 1637:(1937) 1629:(1936) 1101:(1941) 1093:(1940) 1085:(1940) 1077:(1939) 1069:(1938) 1061:(1938) 1053:(1937) 1045:(1937) 1037:(1937) 1029:(1936) 1021:(1933) 1013:(1932) 1005:(1930) 997:(1928) 989:(1927) 981:(1926) 973:(1925) 965:(1924) 957:(1923) 949:(1922) 941:(1919) 933:(1918) 925:(1917) 917:(1916) 909:(1915) 901:(1915) 893:(1915) 890:Bealby 885:(1914) 877:(1914) 869:(1913) 861:(1912) 853:(1911) 845:(1910) 837:(1910) 829:(1909) 821:(1909) 813:(1908) 805:(1906) 797:(1905) 789:(1905) 781:(1904) 773:(1902) 765:(1901) 757:(1900) 749:(1899) 741:(1898) 733:(1897) 725:(1896) 717:(1896) 709:(1895) 701:(1895) 690:Novels 639:format 308:, and 138:Author 82:  75:  68:  61:  53:  786:Kipps 391:Notes 192:Pages 156:Genre 87:JSTOR 73:books 898:Boon 339:Jung 187:1932 177:(US) 172:(UK) 59:news 637:PDF 206:by 195:850 35:to 1707:: 387:. 281:. 46:. 1610:" 1606:" 1603:" 1599:" 1596:" 1592:" 1589:" 1585:" 1582:" 1578:" 1575:" 1571:" 1568:" 1564:" 1561:" 1557:" 1554:" 1550:" 1547:" 1543:" 1540:" 1536:" 1533:" 1529:" 1526:" 1522:" 1519:" 1515:" 1512:" 1508:" 1505:" 1501:" 1498:" 1494:" 1491:" 1487:" 1484:" 1480:" 1477:" 1473:" 1470:" 1466:" 1463:" 1459:" 1456:" 1452:" 1449:" 1445:" 1442:" 1438:" 1435:" 1431:" 1428:" 1424:" 1421:" 1417:" 1414:" 1410:" 1407:" 1403:" 666:e 659:t 652:v 109:) 103:( 98:) 94:( 84:· 77:· 70:· 63:· 40:.

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"The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind"
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H. G. Wells
Political economy
William Heinemann
Doubleday, Doran
H. G. Wells
The Outline of History
The Science of Life
open conspiracy
Society of Authors
Amber Reeves
Alexander Carr-Saunders
Odette Keun
Graham Wallas
Great Depression
Roger Bacon
Enlightenment
Denis Diderot
Pleistocene

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