"He was curious and he was alertly attentive to all that went on around him. He had that rarest of all attributes in the scholar and historian — that gift without which all education is useless. He had mother wit. He read what he needed to read, and he understood what he read. And he was fortunate; he lived and worked in a rapidly developing society. George had the unique opportunity of studying the formation of a civilization — the change of an encampment into a thriving metropolis. He saw a city of tents and mud change into a fine town of paved streets and decent housing, with tramways and buses. And as he saw the beginning of wealth, he noted the first appearance of pauperism. He saw degradation forming as he saw the advent of leisure and affluence, and he felt compelled to discover why they arose concurrently."
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Philosophers from the United StatesPeople from PhiladelphiaHumanistsEconomists from the United StatesGeorgists
Original Language: English
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Sources
Agnes de Mille, in an Afterword for editions of Progress and Poverty
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Henry_George
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Henry George
1839 – 1897
US-amerikanischer Ökonom
62 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Henry George →
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