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America's Economic Moralists: A History of Rival Ethics and Economics

SUNY Press

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    AMERICA’S ECONOMIC MORALISTS
    Contents
    Acknowledgments
    1. Introduction
    2. Colonial Faith: Work,Wealth, and the Wider Welfare
    3. Acting for Self ’s Sake: The Later Colonial Era
    4. Laissez-Faire for Americans
    5. Ethics Better than the Morals of Hermits
    6. Religious Socialism: The Communal Moravians
    7. Abolition: Human Dignity as a Boundary to Markets
    8. Social Darwinists of Different Species
    9. New Influences in Economics
    10. The Social Gospel and Catholic Thought Around 1900
    11. The 1920s and 1930s: Depressed Old Values
    12. Too Agnostic, Too Certain: Welfare Economics, Chicago Economics
    13. Moralists of Twentieth-Century Capitalism
    14. Unconventional Alternatives to the Conventional Wisdom
    15. An Ecumenical Consensuson Economic Ethics
    16. Summary, Assessments,and a Projection
    Notes
    Works Cited
 
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Index
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 America's Economic Moralists: A History of Rival Ethics and Economics
by Donald E. Frey
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Bibliographic information

TitleAmerica's Economic Moralists: A History of Rival Ethics and Economics
AuthorDonald E. Frey
PublisherSUNY Press
Publication Date2/6/09
SubjectAmerican History,Economy and Society,Economic History, Philosophy
Pages251


Description 

Traces the history of two rival American economic moralities from colonial times to the present.

Since colonial times, two discernable schools have debated major issues of economic morality in America. The central norm of one morality is the freedom, or autonomy, of the individual and defines virtues, vices, obligations, and rights by how they contribute to that freedom. The other morality is relational and defines economic ethics in terms of behaviors mandated by human connectedness. America's Economic Moralists shows how each morality has been composed of an ethical outlook paired with a compatible economic theory, each supporting the other. Donald E. Frey adopts a multidisciplinary approach, not only drawing upon historical economic thought, American religious thought, and ethics, but also finding threads of economic morality in novels, government policies, and popular writings. He uses the history of these two supported yet very different views to explain the culture of excess that permeates the morality of today's economic landscape.



About the Author 

Donald E. Frey ---

Donald E. Frey is Professor of Economics at Wake Forest University and the author of Tuition Tax Credits for Private Education: An Economic Analysis.




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