Frederick Bastiat
Amazon Price: $2.99
List Price: $2.99
Usually ships in 24 hours
By: BN Publishing
Amazon Marketplace: 24
new & used starting at $2.99
|
Buy at Amazon.com
|
Browse similar items by category:
Subjects -> Business & Investing -> Popular Economics -> General
Subjects -> Business & Investing -> Popular Economics -> General AAS
Subjects -> Nonfiction -> Government -> Congresses, Senates, & Legislative Bodies
Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 92
Average rating: 5.0 of 5
PRINTING PROBLEM IN THIS ITEM 1 out of 5 stars.
7 of 7 people found this review helpful.
The substance of Bastiat's "The Law" is critical and accurate.
The good people at Cosimo Books, however, cut off the printing before the end of the book -- the penultimate section of the book ends in mid-sentence, and the last section of the book isn't there at all.
So I do very much encourage everyone to read Bastiat's "The Law," just don't buy this version from this publisher. (Buy it from the Mises Institute instead.)
I agree with him 100 percent, but... 2 out of 5 stars.
5 of 6 people found this review helpful.
While I agree with Bastiat entirely, the way that he has presented "the classic blueprint for a just society," is exactly why people who lean more towards socialist ideas scoff at those who are for capitalism, economic stability, and most importantly honoring the fundamentals of the need for law: to protect life, liberty, and property.
The first chapter started out wonderfully, articulately and simple. It was accessible and easy to understand and apply. I was excited as I hoped to share this with my husband to allow him to open up to my ideas on politics which are different from his (he's a democrat/socialist).
However, the rest of the book just seemed to be a rant that got more and more impassioned as it went along, which to me seemed to take away from the reader's ability to take what he was saying seriously. I was disappointed because even though I agreed with everything he said and thought his applications of his ideas were great, I felt sort of embarrassed about his inability to keep calm in expressing his ideas.
The book is sound, based on sound ideas and should appeal to any libertarian. I nodded a lot as I was reading it. "Yes!" I kept telling myself, "this is definitely true." Unfortunately the truth was told, in this case, in a way that I don't think would be very accessible to the people that Bastiat was intent on reaching. I think a democrat/socialist might mislabel it "too radical" when they really mean, "too impassioned."
It is for that reason, I'm sorry to say, I was unable to rate this any higher.
Editorial Review:
Frederic Bastiat's arguments against socialism are as valid today as when first published in 1850. 2 cassettes.