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1
00 - Frontmatter, How the Book Came To Be Written, and Preface
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2
01 - Introductory
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3
02 - Book I, Chapter 1: The Current Doctrine of Wages - Its Insufficiency
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4
03 - Book I, Chapter 2: The Meaning of the Terms
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5
04 - Book I, Chapter 3: Wages Not Drawn from Capital, but Produced by the Labor - paragraphs 1-25
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6
05 - Book I, Chapter 3: Wages Not Drawn from Capital, but Produced by the Labor - paragraphs 26-38
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7
06 - Book I, Chapter 4: The Maintenance of Laborers Not Drawn from Capital
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8
07 - Book I, Chapter 5: The Real Functions of Capital
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9
08 - Book II, Chapter 1: The Malthusian Theory, Its Genesis and Support
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10
09 - Book II, Chapter 2: Inferences from Facts - paragraphs 1-19
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11
10 - Book II, Chapter 2: Inferences from Facts - paragraphs 20-40
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12
11 - Book II, Chapter 3: Inferences from Analogy
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13
12 - Book II, Chapter 4: Disproof of the Malthusian Theory
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14
13 - Book III, Chapter 1: The Inquiry Narrowed to the Laws of Distribution - The Necessary Relation of These Laws
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15
14 - Book III, Chapter 2: Rent and the Law of Rent
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16
15 - Book III, Chapter 3: Of Interest and the Cause of Interest
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17
16 - Book III, Chapter 4: Of Spurious Capital and of Profits Often Mistaken for Interest
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18
17 - Book III, Chapter 5: The Law of Interest
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19
18 - Book III, Chapter 6: Wages and the Law of Wages
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20
19 - Book III, Chapter 7: The Correlation and Co-ordination of These Laws
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21
20 - Book III, Chapter 8: The Statics of the Problem Thus Explained
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22
21 - Book IV, Chapter 1: The Dynamics of the Problem Yet to Seek
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23
22 - Book IV, Chapter 2: The Effect of Increase of Population Upon the Distribution of Wealth
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24
23 - Book IV, Chapter 3: The Effect of Improvements in the Arts upon the Distribution of Wealth
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25
24 - Book IV, Chapter 4: Effect of the Expectation Raised by Material Progress
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26
25 - Book V, Chapter 1: The Primary Cause of Recurring Paroxysms of Industrial Depression
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27
26 - Book V, Chapter 2: The Persistence of Poverty Amid Advancing Wealth
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28
27 - Book VI, Chapter 1: Insufficiency of Remedies Currently Advocated - paragraphs 1-22
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29
28 - Book VI, Chapter 1: Insufficiency of Remedies Currently Advocated - paragraphs 23-54
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30
29 - Book VI, Chapter 2: The True Remedy
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31
30 - Book VII, Chapter 1: The Injustice of Private Property in Land
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32
31 - Book VII, Chapter 2: The Enslavement of Laborers the Ultimate Result of Private Property in Land
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33
32 - Book VII, Chapter 3: Claim of Land Owners to Compensation
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34
33 - Book VII, Chapter 4: Property in Land Historically Considered
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35
34 - Book VII, Chapter 5: Of Property in Land in the United States
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36
35 - Book VIII, Chapter 1: Private Property in Land Inconsistent with the Best Use of Land
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37
36 - Book VIII, Chapter 2: How Equal Rights to the Land May Be Asserted and Secured
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38
37 - Book VIII, Chapter 3: The Proposition Tried by the Canons of Taxation
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39
38 - Book VIII, Chapter 4: Indorsements and Objections
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40
39 - Book IX, Chapter 1: Of the Effect Upon the Production of Wealth
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41
40 - Book IX, Chapter 2: Of the Effect Upon Distribution and Thence Upon Production
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42
41 - Book IX, Chapter 3: Of the Effect Upon Individuals and Classes
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43
42 - Book IX, Chapter 4: Of the Changes That Would Be Wrought in Social Organization and Social Life
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44
43 - Book X, Chapter 1: The Current Theory of Human Progress--Its Insufficiency
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45
44 - Book X, Chapter 2: Differences in Civilization--To What Due
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46
45 - Book X, Chapter 3: The Law of Human Progress - paragraphs 1-21
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47
46 - Book X, Chapter 3: The Law of Human Progress - paragraphs 22-47
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48
47 - Book X, Chapter 4: How Modern Civilization May Decline
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49
48 - Book X, Chapter 5: The Central Truth
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50
49 - Conclusion: The Problem of Individual Life