Das Kapital<\/strong>
Karl Marx<\/p>\nHis thinking may not be as popular as it was in the Sixties and Seventies, but it’s as relevant. The cardinal critique of the capitalist system.<\/p>\n
The Rights of Man<\/strong>
Tom Paine<\/p>\nWritten during the heady days of the French Revolution, Paine’s pamphlet – by introducing the concept of human rights – remains one of modern democracy’s fundamental texts.<\/p>\n
The Social Contract<\/strong>
Jean-Jacques Rousseau<\/p>\n‘Man is born free; and everywhere he is in chains.’ How are we to reconcile our individual rights and freedoms with living in a society?<\/p>\n
Democracy in America<\/strong>
Alexis de Tocqueville<\/p>\nThis treatise looked to the new country’s flourishing democracy in the early 19th century and the progressive model it offered ‘old’ Europe.<\/p>\n
On War<\/strong>
Carl von Clausewitz<\/p>\nThe first, and probably still foremost, treatise on the art of modern warfare. The Prussian general looked beyond the battlefield to war’s place in the broader political context.<\/p>\n
\n\n\n\n<\/center>\n<\/td>\n\n<\/tr>\n | \n\nThe Prince: the ultimate mandate for politicians who value power above justice<\/center>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n The Prince<\/strong> Niccolo Machiavelli<\/p>\nWritten during his exile from the Florentine Republic, Machiavelli’s bible of realpolitik offers the ultimate mandate for those (still-too-many) politicians who value keeping power above dispensing justice.<\/p>\n Leviathan<\/strong> Thomas Hobbes<\/p>\nHobbes’s call for rule by an absolute sovereign may not sound too progressive, but it was based on the then-groundbreaking belief that all men are naturally equal.<\/p>\n On the Interpretation of Dreams<\/strong> Sigmund Freud<\/p>\nDrawing on his own dreams, plus those of his patients, Freud asserted that dreams – by tapping into our unconscious – held the key to understanding what makes us tick.<\/p>\n On the Origin of Species<\/strong> Charles Darwin<\/p>\nNo other book has so transformed how we look at the natural world and mankind’s origins.<\/p>\n L’Encyclop\u00e9die<\/strong> Diderot, et al<\/p>\nSubtitled ‘A Systematic Dictionary of the Sciences, Arts, and Crafts’, with contributions by Voltaire, Montesquieu, Diderot and others, the 35-volume encyclopedia was the ultimate document of Enlightenment thought.<\/p>\n \nBOOKS THAT CHANGED YOUR WORLD<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n\n | \n<\/center>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n\n\nZen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: a feel-good memoir that became the biggest-selling philosophy book of all time<\/center>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance<\/strong> Robert M. Pirsig<\/p>\nPirsig’s feel-good memoir about a father-son motorcycle trip across America became the biggest-selling philosophy book of all time.<\/p>\n Jonathan Livingston Seagull<\/strong> Richard Bach<\/p>\nBach’s fable about a dreamy seagull called Jonathan, who seeks to soar above the ideology of his flock, became a New Age classic, and is dedicated to the ‘real seagull in all of us’.<\/p>\n The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy<\/strong> Douglas Adams<\/p>\nOriginally broadcast on Radio 4, this quotable comedy about a hapless Englishman and his alien friend proved that sci-fi could be clever and funny.<\/p>\n The Tipping Point<\/strong> Malcolm Gladwell<\/p>\nGladwell uses everything from teenage smoking to Sesame Street to show how one person’s small idea, or way of thinking, can spark a social epidemic.<\/p>\n The Beauty Myth<\/strong> Naomi Wolf<\/p>\nWolf, the controversial American feminist (and teenage victim of anorexia), argues that women’s insecurities stem from society’s demands on them either to be beautiful or face judgment.<\/p>\n How to Cook<\/strong> Delia Smith<\/p>\nThe cookery queen’s series is credited with teaching culinary delinquents how to prepare good wholesome food from scratch. Her latest book, How to Cheat at Cooking, does the opposite.<\/p>\n | | | |