In bestowing charity, the main consideration should be to help those who help themselves. It provides part of the means by which those who desire to improve may do so; to give to those who desire to rise the aids by which they may rise. (Andrew Carnegie)
In the essay “The Gospel of Wealth” by Andrew Carnegie he gives his vision on how the gap between rich and poor could be closed. He argued that if people with incredible amounts of wealth were forced or were opportunistic about giving away huge percentages of their wealth to charity. In the essay, he articulates the exact kind of charity he would expect that people would be involved in. Carnegie was major believer in philanthropy he believed that men like his self could solve the problems of
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Carnegie did not just talk to talk he put his money where his mouth was by donating 90% of his money. In the article, he explains that the wealthy should act as a trustee for the poor administering their wealth throughout the community. Carnegie also believed that people who did not devote their life to giving away their wealth died un-honored. Andrew Carnegie was born in Dunfermline, Scotland he emigrated to the United States in 1848 he got his start in business with investments in the railroads. Carnegie started his own steel company that he would eventually sell to J.P. Morgan. When he sold, it he became the wealthiest American and that is when he became one of the first philanthropist of modern times. In this essay, we will analysis some of Carnegie’s essay with other great works such as the …show more content…
David Thoreau believed that material possessions were the biggest problem of the world he believed people should return to nature and live off the land. Thoreau believed that people should find what they love to do and do it. He believed that most people in the world didn’t live because most people were always off chasing material possessions and not ever stopping to smell the roses. Thoreau’s idea of a good life would be completely opposite of the life that Andrew Carnegie would have envisioned as a good