Sunday, August 4, 2019
Alternatives to Capitalism Explored in Thomas Mores Utopia :: More Utopia Essays
Alternatives to Capitalism Explored in Thomas More's Utopia     à     à  Ã   Thomas More's use of dialogue in "Utopia"  is not only practical     but masterly layed out as well. The text itself is divided into two parts.  The     first , called "Book One",à   describes the English society of the  fifteenth     century with such perfection that it shows many complex sides of the     interpretted structure with such clarity and form that the reader is given  the     freedom for interpretation as well. This flexibilityà   clearly  illustrates     More's request for discussion and point of view from this reader. In one     concise, artistic paragraph, More clearly illustrates his proposition of  the     problems people possess within a capitalist society and the fault of the     structure itself; clearly showing More's point of view for "Book One". If  More     attempted to get anything across to the people of England it was this:     à       à  Ã  Ã  Ã   Take a barren year of failed harvests, when many  thousands of men have been     carried off by hunger. If at the end of the famine the barns of the rich  were     searched. I dare say positively enough grain would be found in them to  have     saved the lives of all those who died from starvation and disease, if it  had     been divided equally among them. Nobody really need have suffered from a  bad     harvest at all. So easily might men get the necessities of life if that  cursed     money, which is supposed to provide access to them, were not in fact the  chief     barrier to our getting what we need to live. Even the rich, I'm sure,  understand     this. They must know that it's better to have enough of what we really need  than     an abundance of superfluities, much better to escape from our many  present     troubles than to be burdened with great masses of wealth. And in fact I have  no     doubt that every man's perception of where his true interest lies, along  with     with the authority of Christ our Saviour..... would long ago have brought  the     whole world to adopt Utopian laws, if it were not for one single monster,  the     prime plague and begetter of all others---I mean pride. (More, pg.83) For one  to     fully realize the significance of this virtueous paragraph they first  must     remember the time period it was written; more so now that we are in the     					    
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