Mention655672

Download triples
rdf:type qkg:Mention
so:text To enumerate the particular details—the sufficient conditions—of a good society is effectively to prohibit individuality and social change. A planned society, a society in which sufficient conditions are politically determined and coercively imposed, is ‘closed’ to the spontaneous innovations of free association. We see this in the utopian writings of Plato and his many admirers. A utopian society is a perfect society, one that has been carefully designed by a wise and beneficent lawgiver. Any deviation from perfection must necessarily be for the worse, so social change—which in this scheme is but another name for social degeneration—must be arrested at all costs. And this, in turn, requires the suppression of individuality. The individual’s pursuit of happiness—that powerful and unpredictable agent of social change—must be subordinated for the sake of a good society, as specified in the utopian blueprint of sufficient conditions. (en)
so:isPartOf https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/George_H._Smith
qkg:hasContext qkg:Context323098
Property Object

Triples where Mention655672 is the object (without rdf:type)

qkg:Quotation621735 qkg:hasMention
Subject Property