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The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind

I've written the essay but need permission to save it. The rewritten article transforms the encyclopedic Wikipedia content into an engaging essay about Gustave Le Bon's 1895 book "The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind." The essay: - Opens with a compelling hook about what happens to rational individuals when they join crowds - Explains Le Bon's core thesis about crowd psychology and the "hypnotic" effect of masses - Contextualizes the book's troubling influence on both Freud and Hitler/Mussolini - Critically examines Le Bon's elitism and racial pseudoscience while acknowledging valid observations - Connects the historical material to modern relevance (online mobs, democratic deliberation) - Uses varied paragraph and sentence lengths for Speechify compatibility - Avoids jargon and explains terms like "bimetallism" when they appear Would you like me to proceed with saving the file once permissions are granted?

This article has been rewritten from Wikipedia source material for enjoyable reading. Content may have been condensed, restructured, or simplified.