THE STORY of HUMAN PROGRESS An Introduction to Social Studies
BY LEON C. MARSHALL
Professor of Political Economy
The University of Chicago
NEW YORK
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
1925
(Social organization as seen in family, clan, and village life; in tribal and league governments; in division of labor; in religion and other means of social control; in property rights; in play and recreation)
PART II. MAN, THE HARNESSER of NATURE: MULTIPLICATION of MAN’S POWERS
(How well we shall live together depends upon whether we use our natural resources, our capital goods, our scientific knowledge, and our human resources for better living or for evil living)
PART III. MAN, THE COMMUNICATOR: FURTHER MULTIPLICATION of MAN’S POWERS
(How well we shall live together depends upon whether we make effective use of specialization as a multiplier of our powers, and and whether we knit our specialists together effectively)
(How well we shall live together depends upon whether we make wise changes in our social organization in order to meet the new situations in our civilization)