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Ethical Dimensions of the Economy [electronic resource] : Making Use of Hegel and the Concepts of Public and Merit Goods / by Wilfried Ver Eecke.

By: Contributor(s): Series: Studies in Economics Ethics and PhilosophyPublisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2008Description: XIV, 304 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783540771111
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 330 23
LOC classification:
  • HB71-74
Online resources:
Contents:
Normative Reflections on the Economy -- The Interconnection of Moral and Economic Theory -- Economics and Politics in the Architectonic of Hegel’s Thought -- The Ethical Function of the Economy -- The Economic Order: A Human, Not a Natural Institution -- The Concept of “Merit Good” and the History of Economic Thought -- Objecting to a Libertarian Attack on Governmental Functions in the Economy: The Concept of “Public Good” -- Applications -- Structural Deficiencies in the American System -- Unjust Redistribution in the American System -- The Role of Religion and Civil Society in a Transformed Command Economy -- Overlapping Ideas: Catholic Social Thought and Recent Nobel Laureates in Economics -- Conclusion.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This book reflects philosophically about the socio-political dimension of economics. Part I provides normative reflections on the economy: Section I reflects on the interconnections between the multiple discourses on the economy, section II presents Hegel's claim that the economic order is an ethical institution and defends his ontological view of the economy against the one of Adam Smith. Section III dialogues with economists about their concepts of public and merit goods. This section defends a Hegelian ontology of the economy through an analysis of technical concepts used by economists. Part II provides applications derived from the normative analysis: Section I presents the views of authors in different academic disciplines pointing to failures in late capitalism, in particular failures of American capitalism and section II asks the question: " What must one pay attention to in a transition from a command economy to a free market?" Section III draws attention to an overlap of ideas found in Catholic Social Thought and in the publications of some recent Nobel prize winners in economics (Buchanan, Sen, Stiglitz).
Item type: eBooks
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Normative Reflections on the Economy -- The Interconnection of Moral and Economic Theory -- Economics and Politics in the Architectonic of Hegel’s Thought -- The Ethical Function of the Economy -- The Economic Order: A Human, Not a Natural Institution -- The Concept of “Merit Good” and the History of Economic Thought -- Objecting to a Libertarian Attack on Governmental Functions in the Economy: The Concept of “Public Good” -- Applications -- Structural Deficiencies in the American System -- Unjust Redistribution in the American System -- The Role of Religion and Civil Society in a Transformed Command Economy -- Overlapping Ideas: Catholic Social Thought and Recent Nobel Laureates in Economics -- Conclusion.

This book reflects philosophically about the socio-political dimension of economics. Part I provides normative reflections on the economy: Section I reflects on the interconnections between the multiple discourses on the economy, section II presents Hegel's claim that the economic order is an ethical institution and defends his ontological view of the economy against the one of Adam Smith. Section III dialogues with economists about their concepts of public and merit goods. This section defends a Hegelian ontology of the economy through an analysis of technical concepts used by economists. Part II provides applications derived from the normative analysis: Section I presents the views of authors in different academic disciplines pointing to failures in late capitalism, in particular failures of American capitalism and section II asks the question: " What must one pay attention to in a transition from a command economy to a free market?" Section III draws attention to an overlap of ideas found in Catholic Social Thought and in the publications of some recent Nobel prize winners in economics (Buchanan, Sen, Stiglitz).

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