Bernard Mandeville’s didactic poem praising the virtues that personal vices bestow on society as a whole, along with several treatises and dialogues explaining and defending it. Mandeville’s theories were influential in the development of both the moral philosophy of the Scottish Enlightenment and the methodology of modern economics. – Summary by Matthew Muñoz
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Part I, Preface
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Part I, The Grumbling Hive: or Knaves turn’d Honest
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Part I, The Introduction
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Part I, An Inquiry into the Origin of Moral Virtue
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Part I, Remarks, Line 45
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Part I, Remarks, Line 55
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Part I, Remarks, Line 101
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Part I, Remarks, Line 125
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Part I, Remarks, Line 128
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Part I, Remarks, Line 163
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Part I, Remarks, Line 167
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Part I, Remarks, Line 173
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Part I, Remarks, Line 177
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Part I, Remarks, Line 180
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Part I, Remarks, Line 182
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Part I, Remarks, Line 183
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Part I, Remarks, Line 200
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Part I, Remarks, Line 201
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Part I, Remarks, Line 307
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Part I, Remarks, Line 321
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Part I, Remarks, Line 353
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Part I, Remarks, Line 367
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Part I, Remarks, Line 388
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Part I, Remarks, Line 410
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Part I, Remarks, Line 411
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Part I, An Essay on Charity and Charity Schools, Section 1
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Part I, An Essay on Charity and Charity Schools, Section 2
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Part I, An Essay on Charity and Charity Schools, Section 3
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Part I, An Essay on Charity and Charity Schools, Section 4
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Part I, A Search into the Nature of Society, Section 1
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Part I, A Search into the Nature of Society, Section 2
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Part I, A Vindication of the Book, from the Aspersions contained in a Presentment of the Grand Jury of Middlesex, and an Abusive Letter to Lord C——