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| Dimensions: 9.5'' x 6.5'' |
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| 334 pages |
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Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
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| Publication Date: July 1993 |
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| Hardcover |
| ISBN: 002923235X |
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Any vision of capitalism's future prospects must take into account the powerful cultural influence Catholicism has exercised throughout the world. The Church had for generations been reluctant to come to terms with capitalism, but, as Michael Novak argues in this important book, a hundred-year-long debate within the Church has yielded a richer and more humane vision of capitalism than that described in Max Weber's classic The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism.
Novak notes that the influential Catholic intellectuals who, early in this century saw through Weber's eyes an economic system marked by ruthless individualism and cold calculation had misread the reality. For, as history has shown, the lived experience of capitalism has depended to a far greater extent than they had realized on a culture characterized by opportunity, cooperative effort, social initiative, creativity, and invention.
Drawing on the major works of modern Papal thought, Novak demonstrates how the Catholic tradition has come to reflect this richer interpretation of capitalist culture. In 1891, Pope Leo XIII condemned socialism as a futile system, but also severely criticized existing market systems. In 1991, John Paul II surprised many by conditionally proposing "a business economy, a market economy, or simply free economy" as a model for Eastern Europe and the Third World. Novak notes that as early as 1963, this future Pope had signaled his commitment to liberty. Later, as Archbishop of Krakow, he stressed the "creative subjectivity" of workers, made by God in His image as co-creators. Now, as Pope, he calls for economic institutions worthy of a creative people, and for political and cultural reforms attuned to a new "human ecology" of family and work.
Novak offers an original and penetrating conception of social justice, rescuing it as a personal virtue necessary for social activism.
Michael Novak is the George Frederick Jewett Scholar in Religion, Philosophy, and Public Policy at AEI.

Table of Contents

Preface Introduction: More Than the Protestant Ethic Max Weber's Limits The Human Spirit Toward a Catholic Ethic A Preview
Part I: Which System? Leo XIII to Pius XI (1891-1931)
Chapter 1: Catholics Against Capitalism
- Fanfani's Italy
- Mean, Petty, Selfish, and Materialistic
- Wealth Is a Means, Not an End
- The Catholic Spirit Slowly Awakens
Chapter 2: Socialism, No! Capitalism? Maybe: Leo XIII
Why Did Socialism Fail?
Workers, Yes! Capitalism? Maybe
Toward the Future
Chapter 3: Social Justice Redefined: Pius XI
Rescuing a Virtue
Conceptual Fog
A Brief Historical Overview
A Way Out
The Civil Society: Five Further Steps
From 1931 to 1991
Part II: A New Birth of Freedom: John Paul II (1978- )
Chapter 4: The Second Liberty
- Two Concepts of Liberty
- Order in the Ancien Regime
- A Great Year, 1989
- The Anticapitalist Bias of Intellectuals
- Reconciling Economics and Religion
- Convergence on Choice
- Dynamic Order
- In the Direction of Mind
- The Three Spheres of Liberty
- One Root, Two Liberties
Chapter 5: Capitalism Rightly Understood
- Background Reflections
- Outline of Centesimus Annus
- A Christian Social Anthropology
- Capitalism, Yes
- The Limits of Capitalism
- Toward a More Civil Debate
Part III: Next? Poverty, Race, Ethnicity, and Other Perplexities of the 21st Century
Chapter 6: War on Poverty: "Created Goods Should Abound"
The Universal Destination and the Way
Reconstructing the World Order
International Poverty
Domestic Poverty
Social Invention
Chapter 7: Ethnicity, Race, and Social Justice
- International Perspectives
- The "Civil Society" Project
Chapter 8: Against the Adversary Culture
- Against Nihilism
- Culture and Character
- American Founding Principles, Current Practice
- The Pope's Challenge to the U.S.
- Protecting the Moral Ecology
- The Institutional Task
Epilogue: The Creative Person
- Seven Moral Themes
- The Right Stuff
- Latin America
- The New Virtues Required
- The Heart of the Matter: Creativity
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