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A Yale paperbound

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12
BOOKS
4,412
PAGES
~73h 32min
READING TIME

About Author

Charles R. Swindoll

Charles Rozell Swindoll (born October 18, 1934) is an evangelical Christian pastor, author, educator, and radio preacher. He founded Insight for Living, headquartered in Frisco, Texas, which airs a radio program of the same name on more than 2,000 stations around the world in 15 languages. He was the founding pastor at Stonebriar Community Church, in Frisco, Texas, and also sat on its elder board.

Description

2,000

How the series evolves

beginning
The family of God
0.0· tough start
finale
Friar Felix at large; fifteenth-century pilgrimage to the Holy Land
0.0· messes up the ending
overall
0.0· maybe series needed more care

Books in this Series

The heavenly city of the eighteenth century philosophers

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1

"Lectures delivered in the School of law in Yale university on the Storrs foundation ... April, 1931."--Pref."Published on the Mary Cady Tew memorial fund."--1st prelim. leaf.

The folklore of capitalism

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"Stuart Chase in the Herald Tribune called this book about capitalism "the most realistic political treatise of the lot" and adds that "one must be tough and pitiless honesty and pitiless humanity." Some people may disagree with the fi rst assertion, but the second cannot be denied, for in this brilliant analysis of our social and economic structure Thurman Arnold pulls no punches. By "the folklore of capitalism" the author means those ideas about our social and political system that are not generally regarded as folklore but popularly and usually erroneously accepted as fundamental principles of law and economics. Th rough his searching scrutiny of this "folklore" about capitalism, Th urman Arnold presents a broad scale analysis of the ways in which America thinks and acts. Arnold is concerned with the manner in which our system actually works rather than with the moral principles that are claimed for it. With this purpose as a basis for his analysis, he exposes the virtues and absurdities, the basic facts and inconsistent gospels of American capitalism. He accomplishes all this with an irony and a sharp lucidity that are rare indeed in the treating of such serious topics."--Provided by publisher.