El capitalismo es el único sistema basado en el reconocimiento que cada individuo es dueño de su propia vida. El capitalismo es el único sistema social en el cual los individuos son libres de buscar un autointerés racional, de poseer propiedad y de beneficiarse de sus propias acciones. Fortifica los derechos del individuo, el Gobierno Constitucional limitado y la libertad política / intelectual / económica. Cuando los hombres son libres de dedicarse a su autointerés racional, cuando son libres de utilizar sus mentes en la búsqueda del provecho y de mejorar sus vidas, son magníficamente productivos. La libertad política y económica del capitalismo libera las mejores mentes y a los hombres más ambiciosos a construir, a crear, a innovar, a inventar, a avanzar el bienestar y la felicidad humana.
Andrew Bernstein is an American philosopher. He is a proponent of Objectivism, the philosophy of Ayn Rand, and the author of several books, both fiction and non-fiction.
Excellent short book that takes a look at the benefits of capitalism. There are too few books that make the moral argument for individual rights. That alone makes this book important and timely. Well done.
Very strident; the author is certainly convinced by, but not really very convincing in arguing for, his thesis. This really is unfortunate, because I looked forward to reading, and wanting to like, this book. I guess it's indicative of the whole Objectivist movement - does one use the terminology and stridency of Ayn Rand, or make one's self "Ayn Rand with a Human Face"? I'm a "human facer" myself, in the mold of Daniel Griswold's Mad About Trade.
A tightly written condensed view by a man truly convinced of the importance economically and the moral correctness of capitalism as the only system to free human beings to be as great as their abilities can make them. Reading this book gave me the incentive to order His other book, "The Capitalist Manifesto".
Makes the historical, economic, and moral case for laissez-faire capitalism in terse no-nonsense prose. Ties the abstract principle of individual rights to everyday reality through lots and lots of emotionally powerful concrete examples. Reserving the fifth star because I would have liked to see formal references to the bibliography throughout, and fewer copyediting errors.