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Thomas Hodgskin
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Thomas Hodgskin (12 December 1787 – 21 August 1869) was an English writer on political economy, critic of capitalism and defender of and early .

His views differ from some of the views later assigned to the word 'socialism'."L'Angleterre a-t-elle l'heureux privilège de n'avoir ni Agioteurs, ni Banquiers, ni Faiseurs de services, ni Capitalistes ?". In Clavier, Étienne (1788). De la foi publique envers les créanciers de l'état : lettres à M. Linguet sur le n° CXVI de ses annales (in French). p. 19.

(2026). 9780226168005, University of Chicago Press. .


Biography
Hodgskin's father, who worked at the British Admiralty dock stores, enrolled him in the navy at the age of 12. Coming into conflict with the naval discipline of the time, Hodgskin was retired by the Navy at the age of 25. Publication of his Essay on Naval Discipline brought Hodgskin to the attention of radicals such as .

Entering the University of Edinburgh for study, Hodgskin later came to London and entered the circle around Place, and . With their support, he spent the next five years in a programme of travel and study around Europe. In 1815 Hodgskin travelled in France and Germany, experiences which he documented in his Travels in the North of Germany (1820). He married Eliza Hegewesch in Edinburgh in 1819.

In 1823, Hodgskin joined forces with Joseph Clinton Robertson in founding the Mechanics Magazine. In the October 1823 edition of the Mechanics Magazine, Hodgskin and Francis Place wrote a manifesto for a Mechanics Institute.

(1993). 9781349078455, Macmillan. .

His main works were Labour defended against the claims of Capital (1825) and the four lectures collected as Popular Political Economy (1827). Hodgskin's assertion of the right of workers to the whole produce of their labour was influential but gave rise to his estrangement from his previous supporters, Mill denouncing it as "mad nonsense" which amounted to "the subversion of civilised society".

(2026). 9781791988661, Praescientia Press.

Hodgskin retreated into the realm of Whig journalism after the Reform Act 1832. He had a family of seven children to support. He advocated and was economics editor for from 1843 to 1857.

(1998). 9780861932290, Boydell & Brewster.

In 1848 Hodgskin was also an editorial writer on 's London Telegraph, where he advocated "Free Trade in the enlarged sense" in all fields of life and denounced what he characterised as "the bureaucracy": "a sordid set of self-willed men associated together, and armed, to obtain their own selfish ends and object, under the name of government".

From 1855 to April 1857 Hodgskin published a series of articles setting out his views on the criminal system in The Economist which led to the magazine's proprietor, James Wilson, breaking with him. Hodgskin then developed his theme in two lectures at St Martin's Hall.


Legacy
Hodgskin was a pioneer of , individualist anarchism and libertarian socialism.
(2026). 9789004356894, .
(1998). 9788171567355, Atlantic Publishers & Dist. .
His criticism of employers appropriation of the lion's share of the value produced by their employees went on to influence subsequent generations of , including .


Further reading
  • Halévy, Élie (1903); Taylor, A.J. (trans.) (1956). Thomas Hodgskin. Paris. .
  • Sallis, Edward (1971). The Social and Political Thought of Thomas Hodgskin 1787–1869. MA Social Studies Dissertation University of Newcastle upon Tyne.
  • Stack, David (1998). Nature and Artifice: The Life and Thought of Thomas Hodgskin 1787–1869. Boydell & Brewer. . .


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