Spirituality and business: An interdisciplinary overview
In: Society and economy: journal of the Corvinus University of Budapest, Band 34, Heft 3, S. 489-514
ISSN: 1588-970X
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In: Society and economy: journal of the Corvinus University of Budapest, Band 34, Heft 3, S. 489-514
ISSN: 1588-970X
In: European SPES cahiers 2
In: Virtues and Economics 8
Introduction -- Part I: From gluttony and avarice to moderation and virtue -- Chapter 1. Blessed are the Gentle (Joshtrom Kureethadam) -- Chapter 2. Avarice in post-modern society (Stefano Zamagni) -- Chapter 3. What is Enough (Margaret Atkins) -- Chapter 4. Buddhism and the Right Consumption (Laszlo Zsolnai) -- Chapter 5. Good consumption in the perspective of Thomistic Personalism (Laura Baritz) -- Part II : Is mainstream economics to blame? -- Chapter 6. Political Economy, Moral Reasoning and Global Warming (David Rose) -- Chapter 7. A Critical Approach to Critiquing Economics (Geoffrey Brennan, Hayden Wilkinson) -- Chapter 8. Response from Peter Róna -- Chapter 9. Economics and three faces of prudence (Edward Skidelsky) -- Part III: Way forward -- Chapter 10. Social Trust, Virtue, and Market Coordination (Dominic Burbidge) -- Chapter 11. A Deeper Humanity: The Family as the School of an Inclusive Economy (Joseph Rice) -- Chapter 12. A radically new way to tune compound interest and its implications (Eors Szathmary).
This book brings together a collection of articles from eminent scholars and practitioners from India, Europe, the USA, and Australia and investigates the applicability of spiritually inspired business models in Indian and Western contexts. This book is a tribute to the revered Indian management scholar and philosopher Professor S. K. Chakraborty, a pioneer of human values and Indian ethos in management. It explores the potentials and pitfalls of spiritual-based leadership and provides directions for renewing business education to embrace human values and spirituality. The forty contributions in the book are divided into seven sectionsintroduction; business ethics and management; developing new organizational models and processes; potentials and pitfalls of spirituality-based leadership; leaders and their world; education, spirituality, and society; ways to goto bring out different aspects of the spirituality in business model endorsed by Chakraborty. The book is a treasure trove for researchers of not only business ethics, but also of leadership and strategy studies, in addition to the organization professionals and the general reader for expert insights on the topic.
In: Virtues and economics volume 6
In: Springer eBook Collection
Introduction -- Chapter 1. Made with Words. Intentionality and the Objects of Economics (Péter Róna) -- Chapter 2. An Essay on Humble Economics (Łukasz Hardt) -- Chapter 3. What is economics for? (Brendan Hogan) -- Chapter 4. Should economics make a pragmatic turn? John Dewey, Karl Polanyi, and critique of economic naturalism (Maciej Kassner) -- Chapter 5. Moral Economics - a theoretical basis for building the next economic system (Zsófia Hajnal) -- Chapter 6. How (Not) to Connect Ethics and Economics: Epistemological and Metaethical Problems for the Perfectly Competitive Market (Caspar Willem Safarlou) -- Chapter 7. Research Ethics in Economics: What If Economists and Their Subjects are not Rational? (Altug Yalcintas and Eylül Seren Kösel) -- Chapter 8. Economic choice revisited: lessons from pre-modern thinkers (Agnieszka Wincewicz-Price) -- Chapter 9. Between Individual and Collective Rationality (Anna Horodecka and Liudmyla Vozna) -- Chapter 10. Naturalisation of the Normative Economics (Marcin Gorazda) -- Chapter 11. Beyond Mere Utility-Maximisation. Towards an Axiologically Enriched Account of Well-Being (Tomasz Kwarciński and Wojciech Załuski) -- Chapter 12. Identity Theories in Economics: A Phenomenological Approach (Ricardo Crespo and Ivana Anton Mlinar) -- Chapter 13. Temporal Structures of Justification in the Economic Analysis of Law: Legal Philosophy and Free Will (Kevin Jackson) -- Index.
In: Virtues and Economics
This open access book examines from a variety of perspectives the disappearance of moral content and ethical judgment from the models employed in the formulation of modern economic theory, and some of the papers contain important proposals about how moral judgment could be reintroduced in economic theory. The chapters collected in this volume result from the favorable reception of the first volume of the Virtues in Economics series and represent further contributions to the themes set out in that volume: (i) examining the philosophical and methodological fallacies of this turn in modern economic theory that the removal of the moral motivation of economic agents from modern economic theory has entailed; and (ii) proposing a return descriptive economics as the means with which the moral content of economic life could be restored in economic theory. This book is of interest to researchers and students of the methodology of economics, ethics, philosophers concerned with agency and economists who build economic models that rest in the intention of the agent.
In: Society and economy: journal of the Corvinus University of Budapest, Band 25, Heft 2, S. 1-263
ISSN: 1588-9726
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