Lexington Books
Pages: 152
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-0-7391-0707-2 • Paperback • April 2004 • $51.99 • (£40.00)
Andrew Yuengert is the John and Francis Duggan professor of Economics at Seaver College, Pepperdine University.
Chapter 1 What Does Ethics Have to Do With Economics?
Chapter 2 Why Did the Economist Cross the Road? Morality and Rationality in Thomistic Moral Philosophy
Chapter 3 Multiple Ends and Their Order
Chapter 4 The Ends of Economics in Hierarchical Context
Chapter 5 Aquinas in the Marketplace of Ideas
Chapter 6 Consequences of the Modern Separation of Technique from Prudence
Chapter 7 When is Economics not Technical?
Chapter 8 What Then Should Economists Do?
Draws on the acount of human action in the works of Thomas Aquinas and Aristotle to present an account of economics as purposive, human enterprise and to offer a framework within which to think about the role of ethics in economics.
— Journal of Economic Literature
This book should be read by all economists, but especially Christian economists, for whom values are of vital concern. If you have the time to read one book outside of technical economics, I strongly urge you to read this one.
— Faith and Economics
This extensively documented book makes the case that economics and ethics are meaningfully related. . . .Because most other books on economic methodology do not integrate philosophy and religious thought, this book occupies a unique niche in the field. Highly recommended.
— Choice Reviews