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"Freeland: A Social Anticipation Book I" by Theodor Hertzka delves into a utopian society meticulously crafted through social engineering. Set in a future where economic prosperity thrives alongside technological advancement, citizens embrace cooperative living and sustainable development. Through innovative approaches to social organization and community planning, they prioritize collective ownership and equality, fostering human progress while ensuring environmental stewardship. The narrative envisions a world where resource management is optimized, allowing for equitable distribution and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Freeland: A Social Anticipation Book I" by Theodor Hertzka delves into a utopian society meticulously crafted through social engineering. Set in a future where economic prosperity thrives alongside technological advancement, citizens embrace cooperative living and sustainable development. Through innovative approaches to social organization and community planning, they prioritize collective ownership and equality, fostering human progress while ensuring environmental stewardship. The narrative envisions a world where resource management is optimized, allowing for equitable distribution and abundance for all. Themes of futurism permeate the text as Hertzka explores the possibilities of a society built upon principles of cooperation and shared responsibility. Through vivid descriptions and thought-provoking scenarios, the author paints a picture of a utopia where innovation flourishes, and every individual contributes to the greater good. The book serves as both a critique of contemporary societal structures and a blueprint for a more harmonious future. With its emphasis on social engineering and sustainable practices, "Freeland" offers a compelling vision of what could be achieved through collective effort and forward-thinking policies.
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Autorenporträt
Theodor Hertzka, sometimes known as Hertzka Tivadar, was an economist and journalist of Jewish, Hungarian, and Austrian heritage. He studied at Vienna and Budapest universities before joining the editorial team of Vienna's Neue Freie Presse in 1872. He started the journal Wiener Allgemeine Zeitung in 1879 and served as its editor until 1886. He was friends with Johannes Brahms. Hertzka has been dubbed the "Austrian Bellamy" since his work Freiland, ein soziales Zukunftsbild shares a subject with Edward Bellamy's novel Looking Backward. Though Hertzka was not a Zionist, and his utopian vision was aimed toward humans in general, Theodor Herzl acknowledged Hertzka's impact on his own views in the first chapter of his book Der Judenstaat, which envisaged the establishment of a Jewish state.