Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: North American Review. 189:844-56. Je. '09. Private Property and Personal Liberty in the Socialist State. John Spargo. North American Review. 196: 9-19. Jl.'12. Syndicalism. L. Le- vine. Outlook. 105:771-5. Ap. 5, '13. Taxing Enterprise. R. Spillane. Outlook. 105:115-7. S. 20, '13. Progress of the Single Tax. Outlook. 107:629. Jl. 18, '14. Anarchy and Dynamite. Political Science Quarterly. 27: 586-97. D. '12. Recent Tax Re- forms Abroad. E. R. A. Seligman. Political Science Quarterly. 28:451-79. S. '13. Development of Syndicalism in America. L. Levine. Westminster Review. 170:492-506. N. '08. Alternative to So- cialism. A. H. Weller. World's Work. 113:406-16. Ag. '06. Red Flag and the Torch. Definitions Of Contemporary Socialism American Economic Association Bulletin. 4th Ser. 1: 347-54. Ap. 'ii. Attempts to Define Socialism. J. Martin. SELECTED ARTICLES ON SOCIALISM INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT Prof. William Howard Taft has said that one of the most important questions of the day is a consideration of the theories which underlie the present organization of industrial society. Prof. Jacob Hollander, in a recent book, suggested the possibility of eliminating human poverty through a reorganization of our economic institutions. Prof. Richard T. Ely, in another volume, traces the movement away from what has been considered by many to be the "established order," and Prof. F. W. Taussig thinks that private property is on trial for its life. These and many similar statements that could be quoted from men equally prominent in politics and economics, reflect clearly that American thinkers are aware of the great social unrest of the times. They illustrate more than that. They show that in the minds of a not inconsiderable part of the people, ...