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    The Great State

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    For many years now I have taken a part in the discussion of Socialism.
    During that time Socialism has become a more and more ambiguous term. It
    has seemed to me desirable to clear up my own ideas of social progress
    and the public side of my life by restating them, and this I have
    attempted in this essay.

    In order to do so it has been convenient to coin two expressions, and to
    employ them with a certain defined intention. They are firstly: The
    Normal Social Life, and secondly: The Great State. Throughout this essay
    these expressions will be used in accordance with the definitions
    presently to be given, and the fact that they are so used will be
    emphasised by the employment of capitals. It will be possible for anyone
    to argue that what is here defined as the Normal Social Life is not the
    normal social life, and that the Great State is indeed no state at all.
    That will be an argument outside the range delimited by these
    definitions.

    Now what is intended by the Normal Social Life here is a type of human
    association and employment, of extreme prevalence and antiquity, which
    appears to have been the lot of the enormous majority of human beings as
    far back as history or tradition or the vestiges of material that supply
    our conceptions of the neolithic period can carry us. It has never been
    the lot of all humanity at any time, to-day it is perhaps less
    predominant than it has ever been, yet even to-day it is probably the
    lot of the greater moiety of mankind.

    Essentially this type of association presents a localised community, a
    community of which the greater proportion of the individuals are engaged
    more or less directly in the cultivation of the land. With this there is
    also associated the grazing or herding over wider or more restricted
    areas, belonging either collectively or discretely to the community, of
    sheep, cattle, goats, or swine, and almost always the domestic fowl is
    commensal with man in this life. The cultivated land at least is usually
    assigned, temporarily or inalienably, as property to specific
    individuals, and the individuals are grouped in generally monogamic
    families of which the father is the head. Essentially the social unit is

    the Family, and even where, as in Mohammedan countries, there is no
    legal or customary restriction upon polygamy, monogamy still prevails as
    the ordinary way of living. Unmarried women are not esteemed, and
    children are desired. According to the dangers or securities of the
    region, the nature of the cultivation and the temperament of the people,
    this community is scattered either widely in separate steadings or drawn
    together into villages. At one extreme, over large areas of thin pasture
    this agricultural community may verge on the
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