LIST OF THE AUTHOR'S PUBLICATIONS WHICH HAVE BEEN USED TO A GREATER OR LESS EXTENT IN THE PREPARATION OF THE PRESENT WORK COMPETITION; ITS NATURE, ITS PERMANENCY, AND ITS BENEFICENCE. Address delivered as President of the American Economic Association, in Detroit, Michigan, Dec. 27, 1900. Printed in Publications of the American Economic Association, 1901. MONOPOLIES AND TRUSTS. International Journal of Ethics, April, 1900. AN ANALYSIS OF THE STEEL TRUST. The Cosmopolitan, August, 1901. MUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP OF NATURAL MONOPOLIES. North American Review, March, 1901. INHERITANCE OF PROPERTY. North American Review, July, 1891. UNITED STATES INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION'S REPORT ON LABOR. Yale Review, November, 1902. HOW TO AVERT STRIKES. Boston Evening Transcript, Aug. 3, 1901; also elsewhere. INDUSTRIAL LIBERTY. Address delivered as President of the American Economic Association, Washington, D.C., Dec. 27, 1901. Printed in Publications of the American Economic Association, 1902. Review of PROFESSOR J. MARK BALDWIN'S "SOCIAL AND ETHICAL INTERPRETATIONS." The Expositor, March, 1898. OUR NEIGHBORS. Chapter VII, in "Social Law of Service." New York, 1896. THE IDEA OF EVOLUTION IN SOCIETY The three great ideas in human history The idea of evolution - Darwin The biological and individual aspects of evolution at first developed, later social evolution. EVOLUTION AND INDUSTRIAL SOCIETY The nature of industrial society II. The Hunting and Fishing Stage Examples of the lowest existing tribes. Characteristics of the first stage as seen in the life of the American Indians (a) Their unsettled life (b) Primitive soil cultivation-the women 32 The need of steady labor and coöperation Examples of the change from pastoral to Development of private landownership Self-sufficiency of the groups in this period. Character of early manufacturing Competition not relied on to fix prices Transition to the industrial stage Increasing growth and density of population Increase in wealth and well-being Groups of industries and values of products Use of steam, water, and other power Exports and imports Decline in the death-rate APPENDIX TO PART I. LITERATURE |