Acknowledgments | |
Introduction | p. 1 |
The Geneva Manuscript | p. 22 |
Judgment on Saint-Pierre's Project for Perpetual Peace | p. 26 |
The Government of Poland | p. 30 |
What Is the Third Estate? | p. 35 |
The Metaphysics of Morals | p. 38 |
Reflections on the Philosophy of the History of Mankind | p. 48 |
The Foundations of Natural Law According to the Principles of the Theory of Science | p. 60 |
Addresses to the German Nation | p. 62 |
The Philosophy of Right | p. 71 |
The Philosophy of World History | p. 79 |
The Duties of Man | p. 87 |
Considerations on Representative Government | p. 98 |
Nationality | p. 108 |
Economic Policy and the National Interest in Imperial Germany | p. 119 |
A Jewish State | p. 125 |
Reflections on the Revolution in France | p. 134 |
What Is a Nation? | p. 143 |
The Great Powers | p. 156 |
Nationalism | p. 160 |
Rebuilding Russia | p. 169 |
Manifesto of the Communist Party | p. 178 |
The Nationalities Question and Social Democracy | p. 183 |
Marxism and the National-Colonial Question | p. 192 |
The National Question and Autonomy | p. 198 |
The Right of Nations to Self-Determination | p. 208 |
The Future of French Nationalism | p. 216 |
Fascism | p. 222 |
Mein Kampf | p. 230 |
Three Principles of the People | p. 240 |
The Discovery of India | p. 248 |
Muslim Unity and Arab Unity | p. 255 |
Islamic Government | p. 260 |
On African Socialism | p. 268 |
The Wretched of the Earth | p. 274 |
First Inaugural Address, March 1861 | p. 286 |
Trans-National America | p. 292 |
The Resurrection of the Negro | p. 302 |
Address to a Joint Session of Congress, January 1918 | p. 306 |
Moral Man and Immoral Society | p. 312 |
The New Tribalism: Notes on a Difficult Problem | p. 322 |
Citizenship and National Identity: Some Reflections on the Future of Europe | p. 333 |
"The National Question" Reconsidered from an Ecological Perspective | p. 344 |
Nationalism in the Late Twentieth Century | p. 362 |
Index | p. 373 |
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