LAD/Blog #22: Carnegie's Gospel of Wealth
In Andrew Carnegie's "Gospel of Wealth" he discusses the imbalance in the capitalistic style of big businesses. There is the argument that the powerful businessmen like himself were considered "robber barons", showing the effect of a laissez-faire government. He believed that it was sensible to have disparities between the rich and the poor, a sense of Social Darwinism. Social Darwinism is that social order is accounted as the product of natural selection of those persons best suited to existing living conditions. In other words the best survive and thrive for their traits and characteristics. Despite this ideology, he believed that it was the duty of the wealth to give back to society through charity. His charity work is shown through certain colleges like Carnegie Mellon University.
Similarities can be drawn between Mark Zuckerberg and Andrew Carnegie for their philanthropy. Carnegie's work with colleges is similar to Zuckerberg's with the donation of funds toward schools and health.
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