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Happiness is the Wrong Metric: A Liberal Communitarian Response to Populism (Library of Public Policy and Public Administration Book 11) eBook : Etzioni, Amitai: Amazon.com.au: Books

Happiness is the Wrong Metric: A Liberal Communitarian Response to Populism (Library of Public Policy and Public Administration Book 11) eBook : Etzioni, Amitai: Amazon.com.au: Books


Happiness is the Wrong Metric: A Liberal Communitarian Response to Populism (Library of Public Policy and Public Administration Book 11) 1st ed. 2018 Edition, Kindle Edition
by Amitai Etzioni  (Author)  Format: Kindle Edition
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This timely book addresses the conflict between globalism and nationalism. It provides a liberal communitarian response to the rise of populism occurring in many democracies.  The book highlights the role of communities next to that of the state and the market. It spells out the policy implications of liberal communitarianism for privacy, freedom of the press, and much else. In a persuasive argument that speaks to politics today from Europe to the United States to Australia, the author offers a compelling vision of hope.  Above all, the book offers a framework for dealing with moral challenges people face as they seek happiness but also to live up to their responsibilities to others and the common good.

At a time when even our most basic values are up for question in policy debates riddled with populist manipulation, Amitai Etzioni’s bold book creates a new frame which introduces morals and values back into applied policy questions. These questions span the challenges of jobless growth to the unanswered questions posed by the role of artificial intelligence in a wide range of daily life tasks and decisions. While not all readers will agree with the communitarian solutions that he proposes, many will welcome an approach that is, at its core, inclusive and accepting of the increasingly global nature of all societies at the same time. It is a must read for all readers concerned about the future of Western liberal democracy.
Carol Graham, Leo Pasvolsky Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution and College Park Professor/University of Maryland

In characteristically lively, engaging, and provocative style Etzioni tackles many of the great public policy dilemmas that afflict us today. Arguing that we are trapped into a spiral of slavish consumerism, he proposes a form of liberal communitarian that, he suggests, will allow human beings to flourish in changing circumstances. 

Jonathan Wolff, Blavatnik Chair of Public Policy, Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford

8 January 2018
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Amitai Etzioni
After receiving his Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of California, Berkeley in 1958, Dr. Amitai Etzioni served as a Professor of Sociology at Columbia University for 20 years; part of that time as the Chairman of the department. He was a guest scholar at the Brookings Institution in 1978 before serving as a Senior Advisor to the White House from 1979-1980. In 1980, Dr. Etzioni was named the first University Professor at The George Washington University, where he is the Director of the Institute for Communitarian Policy Studies. From 1987-1989, he served as the Thomas Henry Carroll Ford Foundation Professor at the Harvard Business School.

Dr. Etzioni served as the president of the American Sociological Association in 1994-95, and in 1989-90 was the founding president of the international Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics. In 1990, he founded the Communitarian Network, a not-for-profit, non-partisan organization dedicated to shoring up the moral, social and political foundations of society (http://communitariannetwork.org/). He was the editor of The Responsive Community: Rights and Responsibilities, the organization's quarterly journal, from 1991-2004. In 1991, the press began referring to Dr. Etzioni as the 'guru' of the communitarian movement.

Outside of academia, Dr. Etzioni's voice is frequently heard in the media. In 2001, he was named among the top 100 American intellectuals as measured by academic citations in Richard Posner's book, Public Intellectuals: A Study of Decline.

Also in 2001, Dr. Etzioni was awarded the John P. McGovern Award in Behavioral Sciences as well as the Officer's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany. He was also the recipient of the Seventh James Wilbur Award for Extraordinary Contributions to the Appreciation and Advancement of Human Values by the Conference on Value Inquiry, as well as the Sociological Practice Association's Outstanding Contribution Award.

Dr. Etzioni is married and has five sons.

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4.2 out of 5 stars
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fan143
5.0 out of 5 stars A foundation for conversation followed by action
Reviewed in the United States on 7 February 2018
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This is a profoundly courageous book and one that is breathtaking in its scope. In the context of a world that seems to be coming apart from conflict between people, groups, classes, and nations, this new book by Amitai Etzioni offers a guide for thinking about how to find potential resolutions to intractable conflicts. He carefully outlines strategies for achieving the common good through an iterative process of moral dialogues that continually grapple with both rights and responsibilities across local, national, and global levels. Etzioni revisits his earlier work challenging the view of society as the aggregation of individual preferences or choices in which each attempts to maximize his or her own outcomes (i.e., happiness) for a view that recognizes the social nature of people who need to struggle with moral commitments and understanding within the context of community. In Happiness Is the Wrong Metric, Etzioni does not shy away from the challenging and seemingly irreconcilable differences in tackling such issues as job loss versus free trade, inequality and redistribution, immigration, war and security, and the promise as well as threats of technology. Making the case for a liberal communitarianism as the pathway to bridge the divide between nationalism and globalism, particularism and universalism, and individual rights versus social responsibilities, Etzioni offers a foundation for important conversations within and across communities so we can all live together in ways that make sense. I found the book compelling because it has helped me think about issues that seem all-consuming every day of the present political environment. This is a book to be read, shared, discussed, and built upon. Bravo for wise and thoughtful engagement once again with the most troubling issues of our time.
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R.G. T-D
5.0 out of 5 stars This scholarly offering is not just for scholars—it is for “We, the People”....
Reviewed in the United States on 29 January 2018
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Once in a Blue Moon a book comes along that has the scope and depth of a textbook yet the more universal appeal of a life lessons “self-help” book. Professor Etzioni’s latest contribution identifies many of today’s most difficult societal dilemmas and offers suggestions on how to move from an antagonizing “us-them” approach to a more inclusive and healthier “we” solution. This book has been recommended for inclusion into the permanent collection of Fairfax County, Virginia’s Public Library System and I encourage all library systems to follow suit. For the first time in 150 years, there will be a Super Blue Moon on January 31, 2018. For my part, I think this is less about an astronomical phenomenon and more about the publication of this phenomenal book!
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5.0 out of 5 stars in the eternal struggle between doing good and the temptation to violate our own sense of ...
Reviewed in the United States on 23 January 2018
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Prof. Etzioni’s book looks squarely at one of those big questions thoughtful people must face: in the eternal struggle between doing good and the temptation to violate our own sense of what is right—how do we become “moral wrestlers” and make the right decisions?

That would be enough for any book, but Etzioni goes much further and also probes some of the biggest and most timely questions we must face as a community and a nation: How to deal with the ethical challenges posed by massive loss of jobs caused by automation? How to protect free speech while protecting vulnerable groups from undue harm? How to respond morally (and effectively) when other nations treat their citizens immorally? How to respond to extremism in the Muslim world? And what to do about ethical concerns posed by artificial intelligence—from driverless cars to autonomous weapons?

The scope of Prof. Etzioni’s work is great, and he responds to each moral and ethical issue with experience, compassion, and wisdom.
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Mike Eman
5.0 out of 5 stars Etzioni provides again a society compass
Reviewed in the United States on 3 November 2018
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As Prime Minister of Aruba (2009-2017) and already early on in my political career as Parliamentary Leader of the Christian Democrats in Aruba, I have been constantly inspired in my views of the community and policies to help shape a good society by the writings and thinking of Amitai Etzioni.
Etzioni has made in so many of his books a clear case of how through family and community relations we learn to love, to empathize and to share. These values and norms forms miles of invisible lines of shared happiness, love and respect, forming the fibers that bind a community together, expressed in words as family, society, barrio, neighbor, community pride and friendship.
This is the foundation of a good society. This is the teaching of Amitai Etzioni. All his writings and theories on the source of moral values to create a good society are based on this care and responsibility for the common good.
It is for this reason that I was also somewhat confused by Etzioni’s title of his new book: 'Happiness is the Wrong Metric: Liberal Communitarian Response to Populism”. For in all my translation of what constitutes a good society is the pursuit of happiness instead of the pursuit of material wealth. Everything I did in public office, from promoting social cohesion in the barrios, developing a green pathway for Aruba up to connecting economic prosperity to wellbeing, all had to do with the communitarian view of Etzioni and the critical but profound reflection of Robert F Kennedy on GDP as a measure of wellbeing: “Yet the gross national product does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of their education or the joy of their play. It does not include the beauty of our poetry or the strength of our marriages, the intelligence of our public debate or the integrity of our public officials”.
The great value of Etzioni’s book is helping us understand the dilemma between the pursuit of happiness as a focal point in life and its moments of conflict with the common good. It is a must read for all who are interested in finding the solutions for the great tension arising between the pursuit of individual happiness and the pursuit of a good society. For the populist it might seem obvious that the answer is the individual’s dreams above all as if the final destiny of the quality of the society does not affect that final outcome. It is clear, and Etzioni makes it clear again, in this book that the pursuit of individual happiness cannot take place isolated from the wellbeing of the whole society, for our happiness is also bound to our relationship with others and their faith. I am sure that we find again in his reflections a compass for the navigation in the difficult seas that we all as citizens and public servants need to course the destiny of our people and societies.
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neil gilbert
5.0 out of 5 stars What is a measure of the good life? How does morality interact with the maximization ...
Reviewed in the United States on 21 February 2018
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A compelling and provocative book that wrestles with big questions: What is a measure of the good life? How does morality interact with the maximization of self-interest? Is there a defensible ethical response to the competing claims of globalists and nationalists? How can we calibrate a healthy balance between individual rights and social responsibilities? Etzioni addresses these issues with the intellectual force and wisdom that we have come to expect from one of America’s foremost public intellectuals.
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Habits of the Heart, With a New Preface: Individualism and Commitment in American Life eBook : Bellah, Robert N., Madsen, Richard, Sullivan, William M., Swidler, Ann, Tipton, Steven M.: Amazon.com.au: Books

Habits of the Heart, With a New Preface: Individualism and Commitment in American Life eBook : Bellah, Robert N., Madsen, Richard, Sullivan, William M., Swidler, Ann, Tipton, Steven M.: Amazon.com.au: Books




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Habits of the Heart, With a New Preface: Individualism and Commitment in American Life 1st Edition, Kindle Edition
by Robert N. Bellah (Author), Richard Madsen (Author), William M. Sullivan (Author), & 2 more Format: Kindle Edition


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First published in 1985, Habits of the Heart continues to be one of the most discussed interpretations of modern American society, a quest for a democratic community that draws on our diverse civic and religious traditions. In a new preface the authors relate the arguments of the book both to the current realities of American society and to the growing debate about the country's future. With this new edition one of the most influential books of recent times takes on a new immediacy.




ISBN-13

978-0520254190
Edition

1st
Publisher

University of California Press
Publication date

17 September 2007
Language

English







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Review
"(A) brilliant analysis. Easily the richest and most readable study of American society . . . since The Lonely Crowd." --This text refers to the paperback edition.
From the Back Cover
The contemporary benchmark from which to look back and look forward in the continuing inquiry about American character.--Daniel Bell --This text refers to the paperback edition.
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ASIN ‏ : ‎ B003EV5PNE
Publisher ‏ : ‎ University of California Press; 1st edition (17 September 2007)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
File size ‏ : ‎ 4223 KB
Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Print length ‏ : ‎ 410 pages
Best Sellers Rank: 603,671 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
337 in Religious Studies - Comparative Religion
859 in Sociology of Culture
869 in Comparative Religion
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Jon
1.0 out of 5 stars Don’t waste your time…unless it’s assigned for school.Reviewed in the United States on 6 June 2021
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Terrible. I only had to read this book for a master’s program in Marriage and Family Therapy. Let me sum it up for the other people scrambling for some synopsis (because, let’s be honest, ain’t nobody reading this book): de Tocqueville said a long time ago that individualism was going to be the downfall of American communities. Spoiler alert: he was right. The authors interviewed middle class white Americans in the 1980’s (because apparently only their opinion mattered? 🤷‍♂️) who said they want to hold on to “traditional American values” but “be true to ourselves” at the same time. Save yourself the time and find the cliffsnotes version of this book instead.

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George Fulmore
4.0 out of 5 stars More of an analysis than a vision?Reviewed in the United States on 31 October 2007
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"Habits of the Heart" is not an easy read. There are five authors, none of whom seem to identify themselves. For example, in the edition I've read, there are three Prefaces, none of which ends with the name of an author.
Because of this, there may be less coherence in the flow of the book than there could be. But there is so much "meat" in the book that it is still a good read. But because there are so many quotable areas, and so many opinions expressed, I'm sure a variety of reviews could flow from the book. Here's mine:

The thesis of the book appears to be the argument that in a simpler America, we were tied by obvious economic and social interactions. We could be fiercely individualistic, e.g., as the Blacksmith of a small community, but we were linked because our livelihood was probably dependent on neighbors, and our social base, probably our church, was common to the community.
But, today, with our "utilitarian individualism" remaining, we have spread out and now are confused by our links to our neighbors and communities. We move more often. We are not as likely to be economically dependent on our immediate neighbors. We can easily be convinced that the "success" we have achieved has been via our own hard work and ambition and that we may not have much responsibility to contribute back to our immediate neighbors or communities.
The book mentions, but does not dwell on, the Biblical tradition/obligation to respect and acknowledge the dignity of all. It also talks about the "underclass," saying at one point that solving its plight is one of the greatest challenges of all and that this will take an enormous amount of money. But it also points out that in today's world, it is also easy for successful individuals to convince themselves that those in the underclass have only themselves to blame and/or to think that welfare reform efforts do more harm than good.
The authors seem to come from a personal therapy background and viewpoint that may have been gathered first-hand: "Many people feel empty and don't know \why they feel that way. They have been sold a bill of goods by our system: cash, convenience and consumerism....The reason you don't feel part of it is because nobody is a part of it."
But, at the same time, they appear to be more than willing to look at various sides of an issue, and not take a "hard," simplistic stand:
Values: There are skeptical references about how people form "values" and if they can be trusted to be anything more than based on self-interest.
Marriage and family: There is support for marriage and family responsibilities, but it is pointed out that "to imagine that society's problems can be traced to individuals with inadequate family values seems to us sadly mistaken." Next to religious commitment, kinship and family provides another basis of "social solidarity."
Being single: It is no longer disgraceful to remain unmarried. Further, no one HAS to have children. And one can leave a marriage one doesn't like even when young children are involved.
Government programs: "Neocapitalist ideology aims to convince us that all government social programs have been disastrous failures."
Religion: "Major religious can move people away from the preoccupation with self toward some larger identity." Religion is one of he most important ways that American's "get involved."
Television: "...it would be difficult to argue that there is any coherent ideology or overall message that it communicates."
Business Leadership: "Leaders are frequently power-hungry bullies without any moral restraints."
Childrearing: Children are trained to be independent self-sufficient individuals. Leaving home involves separation and renewed identity. "Leaving home" may include also leaving the parents' church.
Trend to liberalization: "Younger folks tend to be more liberal, less accepting of hypocrisy, e.g., rejecting the belief that only Christians get to heaven."
Public Service: "Most people involve themselves in social institutions to achieve self-interests or because they feel an affinity with certain others."
Today's metropolitan world: "...a wold of diverse, often hostile groups, interdependent in ways too complex for an individual to comprehend." "...we spend most of our time navigating through immense bureaucratic structures - multiversities, corporations, government agencies." And, don't forget those megachurches!

Get the drift? A ton of subject areas are covered and tons of ideas and opinions expressed.
Plus, throughout the book there are references to Tocqueville's studies of America. He found Americans to be "restless in the midst of prosperity." He also found the "new individualism" strangely compatible with conformism. Reference to Tocqueville weaves in and out in the book.
There is also a sense of limits to what can be done: "The individual's need to be successful in work becomes the enemy of the need to find meaning of one's work in service to others." And "Americans know that society is rigged, as is the marketplace."
And an occasional dose of reality: "Midlife, especially for middle-class American men often marks the end of the dream of being able to move forward without compromise, to achieve `perfection.' Unemployment can be particularly painful." (Or, how about a kid or two with "problems?")

But let's end by getting back to what appears to be the book's thesis, by stringing some quotes from the book together:
"What has failed at every level...is integration...we have failed to remember our community as members of the same body."
In an ideal world "it would become part of the ethos of work to be aware of our intricate connectness and interdependence."
"...traditions help us to know that it does make a difference who we are and how we treat one another."
And, "...in our desperate effort to free ourselves from the constrictions of the past, we have jettisoned too much, forgetting a history that we cannot abandon."
"In a healthy society, the private and public life are not mutually exclusive...they are two halves of a whole, two poles of a paradox." "Taking cared of one's own is an admirable motive. But when it combines with suspicion of and withdrawal from the public world, it is one of the conditions of despotism Tocqueville feared."

Another suggestion is that "only effective institutions - economic, political and social - make complex, modern societies livable." Another: "We are facing trends that threaten our basic sense of solidarity with others." And: "The erosion of meaning and coherence in our lives is not something Americans desire."
But a coherent, confident plan to get us "back" to some state of integration is not really convincing in the book. Instead, we get: "it is not clear that many Americans are prepared to consider a significant change in the way we have been living. The allure of the packaged good life is still strong"...even though..."our material belongs have not brought us happiness." And, there is "no question that many Americans find their contribution of work and private lifestyle satisfying."

Today's politicians of all stripes can score points by saying that "America is not headed in the right direction." The statement is broad and open to interpretation. The statement assumes that government leaders are not to be trusted to make the "right" decisions. But the statement is also shallow and meaningless without specific suggestions/recommendations.
For the most part, this is the problem with "Habits of the Heart." I don't think it is ever very convincing in telling us how to turn the ship of state back in the "right direction." Or even if it truly IS in the wrong direction.
But, as I said earlier, there is so much information and so many interesting ideas included, it is a good read. And, maybe, it becomes the basis for individuals to begin to make decisions within their own lives as to where they fit in their "commitments in American life" and the world.

End of Book Review by George Fulmore.
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John P. Mueller
5.0 out of 5 stars Relevant for Our TimesReviewed in the United States on 15 August 2016
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Using interviews of a wide cross section of people, Bellah dissects the problems we face in the post-modern world, relates them to the findings of Tocqueville ~150 years earlier, provides historical continuity and context with the development of the US and finally offers an approach for change that would need to be of the magnitude of the civil rights movement. It really blew my mind, in a good way.

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Will B
5.0 out of 5 stars Insightful read!Reviewed in the United States on 28 October 2016
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Very, very informative read. It was amazing how much I see everything they discussed in my own life and the rest of America. Great book that adds so much to the discussion. It requires discussion so do not read this book alone!

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Jovana De la Rosa
5.0 out of 5 stars Definitely recommend!Reviewed in the United States on 21 August 2019
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This is a perfect book for educating and relating to modern day focus as citizens of a nation. Purpose and position is everything!

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==

Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life
by Robert N. Bellah, William M. Sullivan, Steven M. Tipton, Richard Madsen, Ann Swidler
 3.89  ·   Rating details ·  943 ratings  ·  58 reviews
Meanwhile, the authors' antidote to the American sickness—a quest for democratic community that draws on our diverse civic and religious traditions—has contributed to a vigorous scholarly and popular debate. Attention has been focused on forms of social organization, be it civil society, democratic communitarianism, or associative democracy, that can humanize the market an ...more
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Published May 13th 1996 by University of California Press (first published 1985)
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Katya Littleton
Apr 29, 2007Katya Littleton added it
Recommends it for: people who want to bore themselves to death
Shelves: 2007
This book made me want to bash my head in. Boring, repetitive, and I was forced to finish it for class. If the bookstore doesn't buy it back, I'm setting it on fire and laughing maniacally. (less)
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Nils
Jan 26, 2014Nils rated it really liked it
A canonical text of American sociology in the 1980s, sure to be at the center of reading lists about the 1980s. A quintessential examination of the mental space of middle class white America, in the late Cold War years, the book is a curiously normative document framed as a piece of positive sociology. Its immense popularity stems probably from precisely this balancing act, as well as the great learning wrapped up within Bellah's mellifluous if curiously relaxed and at times repetitive prose. Despite the nuances, at the end of the day, the argument is quite simple: that the narcissistic pursuit of material abundance (what Bellah in an earlier phase of his career had celebrated as "modernization") has revealed itself to Americans as quite empty (the book refuses the Marxist language of "alienation" though it could well be rewritten in that frame), and the choice over how to move forward is between what they refer to as the "therapeutic model," on the one hand, and a return to communitarian integration, focused around family and religion.

Certainly the critique of therapeutalism is sound. Basically, therapy is designed to make people accept the purely individualistic presmises of American social life that are the primary target of HotH: "The problem with therapy is not that intimacy is tyrannically taking over too much of public life. It is that too much of the purely contractual structure of the economic and bureaucratic world is becoming an ideological model for personal life.... The prevalence of contractual intimacy and procedural cooperation, carried over from the boardroom to bedroom and back again, is what threatens to obscure the ideals of both personal virtue and public good." (127) "While the emphasis on connectedness and community would seem to be an advance over 'noncaring self-actualization,' one must ask whether the relentless emphasis on self-interest does not raise doubts as to whether there has really been a shift." (135).

This quotes shows why HotH typifies one of the main directions that people could go as the invested technocratic hopes for what is here referred to as "the Administered society" fade away, especially if they refused to embrace what was not yet being called neoliberalism (e.g. the contractual structure of the economic as an ideological model for personal life) -- e.g. communitarianism, of which it is the great representative. Turning away from technocratic managerialism, the book also offers a deep critique of the enduring American cult of individualism, both in its "utilitarian" form (the rush to get ahead and/or keep up) and in its "expressive" form (the desire to "find oneself" by define one's own private ethics and system of belief).

So what should Americans do once the give up on these materialistic and personalized conception of fulfillment? At every page, the book reinforces the notion that the proper cure to what ails the American soul (here called "heart") is to return to republican political values and the communal integration, especially those offered by tolerant religious sects. The book closes with a methodological call for sociology to reassert itself as "public philosophy," that is, as the profession of norms: the assertion of belief and moral advocacy.

In other words, to be slightly anachronistic, HofH is "1000 points of light" for liberals. The text is highly symptomatic of that worldview for all the things it doesn't do, and for all the things it doesn't acknowledge not doing. It barely acknowledges that it is not about all of America, but specifically about white middle class, suburban America. It remains completely uninterested in any broader transnational context for the struggles it talks about. Its critique of contemporary economic life focuses more on what corporate practices does to the interior lives of workers, rather than on social injustices perpetrated or reinforced by these structures. It shamelessly blends fact and value, claiming that all Americans yearn for the solutions that they pose, whether or not they quite realize it (again, while they studiously avoid Marxist jargon, the shadow of "false consciousness" shrouds much of the argument). There is no acknowledgement of the darker aspects of the American soul, not just in the vicious inter-communal hatreds (these are treated as having faded), but also in the intra-communal repressiveness which is essential to the integrating function that communities serve. Bellah implicitly assumes that there is a basic compatibility between community and individual, that is, that communal endeavor is the best way to achieve individual fulfillment, rather than the abnegation of the same. To which one can only say, that really depends on what your community makes of your individual desires.

Finally, there is a curious note about the anxiety of influence: while Bellah returns obsessively to Tocqueville as the touchstone for the communitarianism he calls for, the book barely acknowledges (except via brief, largely dismissive footnotes) other sociological investigators who have plowed the same terrain with striking different results, notably the Lynds, David Riesman, and Christopher Lasch. (less)
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Bob Prophet
Sep 16, 2010Bob Prophet rated it really liked it
Shelves: favorites
As a former student of sociology with intense curiosity about modern social/political/economic phenomena, I really enjoyed this book and would probably give a copy as a gift to student friends. What I especially liked was the ending where the six (3 pairs) American visions of the public good are outlined, ending with the Administered Society vs. Economic Democracy, neither of which sound pleasant.

I especially like how this analysis unfolds from a "classical republican" perspective and maintains a distance from current partisan stances. The authors' critique of what's being peddled as "therapeutic" was refreshing, challenging the increasingly popular mindset that we need so-called "experts" to teach us how to live and cope.

This is a worthwhile read for those interested in a sociological perspective on shifting American values alongside systemic changes occurring in our society. As a non-religious individual interested in ethics and morality, this book proved a valuable addition to my collection. (less)
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Chris J
Aug 17, 2013Chris J rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
One of those rare examples of academic writing that escaped to the hoi polloi. The title comes from a phrase used by Tocqueville in his observations of American culture. Bellah, et al., examine modern therapeutic culture and how it contrasts with the deepest, in some ways subconscious desires of society and ideas of the "good life."
In 1985 I'm certain this was paradigm-shifting stuff and I'm also certain it inspired much of the reappraisals of modernity as well as those committed,long-standing proponents of tradition.
If you can persevere through the ground-laying first chapter, it's a good read and well worth the time. (less)
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Jonathan
Jun 16, 2008Jonathan rated it really liked it
Shelves: assigned-to-shane, contemporary-america, contemporary-philosophy
The gist: Individualism (whether economic or spiritual) cannot provide meaning, however worthy the freedom it offers may be. Nor can the weak forms of association found in "lifestyle enclaves," inhabited as they are only by similar people who join seeking personal fulfillment. A meaningful life can only be lived in a community, sustained by tradition and by service to others. (less)
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Nadya
Jan 13, 2014Nadya rated it did not like it
Bellah (et al) are primarily concerned with discussing the inevitable overlap of private and public life in American society. Based on 200+ interviews with a representative population of white middle-class America, Bellah draws the conclusion that, as much as Americans are focused on attaining self-reliance and individualism, individualism (i.e. private life) is most meaningful when it is complemented by engagement with society (i.e. public life). He asserts, “individuality and society are not opposites but require each other” (p. 246-7). This interlinking reciprocal relationship, he suggests, is demonstrated through an individual’s involvement in a [conservative Christian] church community.
Bellah uses case studies to demonstrate his point, but his conclusions are not justified by his method. As mentioned, Bellah limits his sample population to white middle-class Americans ..but then goes on to speak of an allegedly singular American identity...

Though impeccably dense, this (at times) reads like a self help book. I would not have finished the book had it not been a required reading for one of my graduate seminars. I am surprised it has such a high rating. (less)
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Margaret Sankey
Sep 22, 2014Margaret Sankey rated it liked it
1985 sociological study which offers some genuinely profound insights into how Americans talk themselves into narratives of self-made people and idealized small towns, although markedly biased by its date (amazingly, women were starting to not see men as "permanent meal tickets" and small town companies were civic minded and hadn't off-shored all the jobs yet). (less)
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John Henry
Nov 19, 2015John Henry rated it really liked it
Shelves: my-library
To become a missional community in our culture, we need this instruction from a cultural anthropologist's view. This book outlines how Americans are living as products of their surrounding culture. It helps us see the forest through the trees. (less)
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Eric
Nov 12, 2019Eric rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Was introduced to the work by way of a Tim Keller video on individualism in the modern culture. This is a well done treatment of current issues in the US, although 'current' in this case goes back to 1985 which made me call into question some of its conclusions. For example, the chapter on religion had one figure that indicated about 40% attendance in weekly worship and that number has not been reached for in the last couple decades, and the current number is usually report in the 18% range. That said there are excellent reasons to take in this book for any student of the current woes of the American psyche.

It took over an hour to get to the meat of the work, but that was an hour well spent in understanding where the authors wanted to take you. And there was a lengthy concluding chapter that recapitulated where you had been. The multiple authors we are told were each to do their own monographs of the data sets that had been compiled - might be worth investigating. (less)
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Dan Gorman
Jun 17, 2018Dan Gorman rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: nonfiction
Thought-provoking read! Robert Bellah and his coauthors argue that individualism, both in capitalistic/utilitarian and personal-expression ways, has run amok. Our participation in civic life is declining across the board, income inequality's soaring, and free-market solutions aren't cutting it. What we need, according to the authors, is a revival of solidarity and communal spirit. This doesn't negate individualism; rather, citizens should recognize something greater. The authors cite "Biblical religion" derived from the Puritans and "civic republicanism" derived from Jefferson as good starting points, for religion and republicanism offer a moral foundational, connecting the individual to other people and recognizing their shared dignity. Yes, Bellah et. al. play up the Puritan roots of America, when there were a lot of other Christianities at work, and they have a fanboy attitude toward Jefferson (albeit a very restrained, Ivory Tower kind of fanboying). Yet I respect the fact that Bellah et. al. think your foundational belief could be religious OR secular.

The authors' central claim, that a society needs a shared foundation, is persuasive. The authors' discussion of an ascendant individualism, which is then used to justify everything from foolhardy tax cuts to welfare reductions to class divisions, is disturbing. Many of the interviews whiz by with the pithy quotes and aw-shucks moralizing of vintage Newsweek articles. This book is kind of a work of academic journalism — not the strongest on historicizing problems, but observant and making some fair criticisms of American society. The book's interview sample has serious structural problems, notably its complete omission of the Midwest, South, and the parts of the West that aren't California, and its focus on white Americans to the exclusion of people of color. Like David Riesman's "The Lonely Crowd," Elaine Tyler May's "Homeward Bound," and similar books reliant on sociological data, the findings in "Habits of the Heart" apply to segments of America, not the whole. Bellah and his collaborators acknowledge there are social groups they didn't study, but they don't give a persuasive rationale for omitting people of color. The fact is, there is no rationale for omitting minorities from a study of American civic life. At least the authors believe that white flight and residential segregation are some of the worst embodiments of individualism.

So: Read with several grains of salt, and keep searching for a strong historical explanation of the transition from a proto-industrial 19th-century culture to a consumer-oriented 20th-century culture. Bellah and his team still point out the dangers of individualism in public life. This book is best read in tandem with Alan Trachtenberg's "The Incorporation of America," Riesman's "The Lonely Crowd," and maybe Roland Marchand's "Advertising the American Dream." I'm still learning the literature about capitalism and its effects on public life, but that's a start. (less)
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Trinity
Apr 15, 2019Trinity rated it it was ok
I had to read this book for one of my classes, so I had to slog my way through it. The premise of the study, an attempt to reconcile American individualism with a need to connect to a community was interesting. I actually learned a lot about the human experience in America and the roles that religion, therapy, and politics play in creating a cohesive community. I found the ideas that were presented to be interesting, but the writing was why I gave this book two stars. The writing was dry, and the book was overly repetitive. The authors were constantly referring to earlier chapters in the book and restating their argument again and again but adding very little new information. I often found myself nodding off because I was not mentally engaged in the topic. You have to sift through all the repetition to get to their meaning, so if you like a tedious game of find the point of this section then I would recommend this book to you. Otherwise, I would say skip it, and if you have to read it for a class good luck and perhaps try reading it while you are standing! (less)
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Jilz
Apr 27, 2009Jilz is currently reading it  ·  review of another edition
I am intrigued. More and more lately, I find myself questioning my lifelong premise that there is a particular purpose for my life, and that it is my duty to discover and fulfill that purpose. One may even be hard pressed to prove conclusively that there is any particular purpose, at all, to our individual lives. It may be that my life has whatever purpose and meaning I choose to assign to it. I'm not particularly comforted by that, but now that I have made it through the Preface to the 2008 Edition, and the Preface to the 2006 Edition, and the Preface to the First Edition, and 8 little pages into the first chapter, I read "American cultural traditions define....the purp0se of human life in ways that leave the individual suspended in glorious, but terrifying, isolation." I think that I may be reading this book at just the right time. (less)
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Michael
Oct 25, 2012Michael rated it really liked it
This is an exceptional sociological examination of American society. The authors use Democracy in America as an interpretive horizon for the evolution of American Society in the late 20th century. Where de- Tocqueville's America was politically and socially engaged, the socio-economic factors that have emerged in the last 40 years have worked to undermine communal opportunity. The authors provide a nice balance between case studies and social science. An exceptional read. ...more
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Landon
Mar 29, 2012Landon rated it did not like it  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: students of sociology
Recommended to Landon by: class assignment
Sociological study...with a focus upon Christianity and American individualism...not my style. This was a class assignment, and the sociology in the book is quite the turn-off. It is dryly written and unengaging, for the layman. It provides the reader with analysis of all of America's problems in regards to individualism, but offers no solutions - highly frustrating. (less)
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John Wise
Apr 01, 2016John Wise rated it it was amazing
Shelves: culture, education
Next to De Tocqueville, an excellent work on American culture.

The Appendix contains an extremely helpful explanation of the difference between research universities and traditional colleges. Research universities have increased the material prosperity of America, but have impoverished America culturally.
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Derek
Oct 04, 2017Derek rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: favorites
Enlightening and shocking and overwhelming. One gets every indication this is a sociological masterpiece. The opposite of a 'light summer read', yet spending the summer underlining, circling, and contemplating the sentences in this book was as demanding as it was satisfying. There is too much to summarize here, but one day, maybe. (less)
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Kristina
Feb 28, 2012Kristina rated it did not like it
I could not get through this book. The whining, self-centeredness, and limited scope of types of people included made the generalizations impossible to stomach. It is probably best loved by children of the 60s, or people who spend their time trying to "find themselves." (less)
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Thadeus
Aug 13, 2008Thadeus rated it it was amazing
Shelves: philosophy, sociology, returned, com-library
This book gives you some vocabulary to think and talk about the state of the American society. I found it very thoughtful and stimulating.
flag2 likes · Like  · comment · see review
Lauren
May 17, 2010Lauren rated it did not like it
Though written in the 1980s, the racist and sexist tones in this book would make you think it was written in the 1880s. Horrible.
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Ken
Jun 29, 2014Ken rated it it was amazing
Every American should read this book. It perfectly explains why our society has reached the current fractious, even destructive point it has.
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Rick
May 14, 2017Rick rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: favorites, philosophy, non-fiction
Remains one of my favorites; really sharp analysis of American life and individualism.
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For The Common Good: Redirecting the Economy Toward Community, the Environment, and a Sustainable Future - Daly, Herman E. | 0046442047050 | Amazon.com.au | Books

For The Common Good: Redirecting the Economy Toward Community, the Environment, and a Sustainable Future - Daly, Herman E. | 0046442047050 | Amazon.com.au | Books


For The Common Good: Redirecting the Economy Toward Community, the Environment, and a Sustainable Future Paperback – 1 September 2018
by Herman E. Daly  (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars    12 ratings
Edition: 2nd Updated, Expanded ed.

Winner of the Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order 1992, Named New Options Best Political Book

Economist Herman Daly and theologian John Cobb, Jr., demonstrate how conventional economics and a growth-oriented industrial economy have led us to the brink of environmental disaster, and show the possibility of a different future.

Named as one of the Top 50 Sustainability Books by University of Cambridges Programme for Sustainability Leadership and Greenleaf Publishing.

Frequently bought together
For The Common Good: Redirecting the Economy Toward Community, the Environment, and a Sustainable Future+Beyond Growth: The Economics of Sustainable Development+Limits to Growth: The 30-Year Update
Total Price:$164.11

About the Author
Named one of the 100 "visionaries who could change your life" by the Utne Reader,Herman E. Daly is the recipient of many awards, including the University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award, the Heineken Prize for Environmental Science, and the "Alternative Nobel Prize," the Right Livelihood Award. He is professor at the University of Maryland's School of Public Affairs, and coauthor with John Cobb, Jr., of For the Common Good.

Publisher ‏ : ‎ BEACON PRESS; 2nd Updated, Expanded ed. edition (1 September 2018)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 544 pages

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4.7 out of 5 stars

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Paula L. Craig
4.0 out of 5 stars Let's hear it for the common good!
Reviewed in the United States on 4 July 2005
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I have been a fan of Professor Daly's for some time. This book has some excellent analysis and some truly great commentary. The writing is a bit dry; if you're new to Professor Daly's work, you might want to try one of his other books first, like "Beyond Growth." "For the Common Good" does have some wonderfully thought-provoking lines. Just to give you a taste: "Economics cannot do without simplifying assumptions, but the trick is to use the right assumptions at the right time." Or, with regards to relying on technological fixes for environmental problems: "It is one thing to say that knowledge will grow (no one rejects that), but it is something else to presuppose that the content of new knowledge will abolish old limits faster than it discovers new ones." Another on the same subject: "If it ain't broke, don't fix it; if you must tinker, save all the pieces; and if you don't know where you're going, slow down." On population control: "Nature's way is not always best, but in this instance it seems more responsible than our current practice of allowing new human beings to be unintended by-products of the sexual fumblings of teenagers whose natural urges have been stimulated by drugs, alcohol, TV, and ill-constructed welfare incentives." Daly's Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare deserves to be far better known than it is. The analysis of misplaced concreteness, especially as it relates to the nature of debt, is very good.

The authors sometimes come across as a little naive in this book. For example, they propose making the government the employer of last resort. I think they do not realize just how hard it is to make such programs work; they inevitably decline into a morass of dependency and corruption. The Washington DC municipal government has taken precisely this approach in the past few decades, with predictable results.

I think the authors would also do well to do some research on the failures of utopian communities; since I was raised a Mormon, I know a lot about some of these. The chapter on religion strikes me as a bit silly. They want to bring God into the building of a more humane society; this is not necessarily bad, but I tend to think that science will take us farther than God will. In my opinion, Christianity's idea that the Second Coming of Christ is not far off is a very serious barrier to giving humanity's long-term future the attention it deserves. Talking about ethics, the authors say "But to believe that God does exist makes the ethical life more authentic." Well, that's only true if God really does exist, which I doubt.

Overall, the book has some excellent points to make. If you're interested in economics and public policy, don't miss it.
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Steve Diput
5.0 out of 5 stars Not your ordinary mechanical view of the economy
Reviewed in the United States on 4 February 2015
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Certainly an unusual book, not the mainstream babbling about the mechanism but goes deeper into UNDERSTANDING of the economy as an interaction between humans, and us with Nature.

Interestingly, some ideas mentioned are from antiquity and some others from Frederick Soddy, a Nobel winner but NOT in economics. Therefore economists usually do not even hear about him (I have a PhD in the field and read about him only here).

Of course Herman Daly presents us with results of his own thinking, and it is both unexpected and useful.
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paul
5.0 out of 5 stars Woven together
Reviewed in the United States on 1 December 2013
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Classic Daly. Refuting the notion, misappropriated from Adams, that individuals acting for individual reasons benefit society as a whole --- Daly reveals the intricate and interconnectedness of society, economy and the environment.
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Matt
5.0 out of 5 stars Ethics of Society Delving Into Poverty, Capitalism, and What We Need To Do
Reviewed in the United States on 28 February 2016
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A truly great and indepth book on the issue of Ethics and society and what we should do in regards to the under priviledged and destitue.
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Carlos R. Nagel
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Reviewed in the United States on 28 July 2015
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This is an iconic book to understand the importance of social and environmental factors in the the economic processes
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For the Common Good: Redirecting the economy toward community, the environment, and a sustainable future.
by Herman E. Daly, John B. Cobb Jr.
 4.19  ·   Rating details ·  159 ratings  ·  13 reviews
Winner of the Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order 1992, Named New Options Best Political Book

Economist Herman Daly and theologian John Cobb, Jr., demonstrate how conventional economics and a growth-oriented industrial economy have led us to the brink of environmental disaster, and show the possibility of a different future.

Named as one of the Top 50 Sustainability Books by University of Cambridges Programme for Sustainability Leadership and Greenleaf Publishing. (less)
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Published April 1st 1994 by Beacon Press (first published 1989)
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Cambridge Programme for Sustainability Leadership
Dec 22, 2010Cambridge Programme for Sustainability Leadership rated it it was amazing
Shelves: the-top-50-sustainability-books
One of Cambridge Sustainability's Top 50 Books for Sustainability, as voted for by our alumni network of over 3,000 senior leaders from around the world. To find out more, click here.

For the Common Good is a wide-ranging critique of contemporary economic policies, covering international trade, population, land use, agriculture, industry, labour, taxation and national security. Although it sets out to challenge conventional economics, it is written in an accessible style and largely avoids speaking in economic jargon and theoretical abstractions.

The authors challenge the two assumptions that support the economic theory of human nature ('homo economicus'): that human wants are insatiable; and the law-like status of the principle of dimishing marginal utility. This view of humans tends to equate gains in society as a whole with the increases in goods and services acquired by its individual members, but it says nothing about the changes in the quality of the relationships that constitute that society. The authors therefore propose a shift from economics conceived as 'crematistics' (maximisation of short-term monetary gain) to the sort of economics Aristotle called 'oikonomia' (management of a household aimed at increasing its use value over the long run for the community).

The main argument throughout is the need to realign government and social structures towards smaller social and economic units. (less)
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The Capital Institute
Jul 27, 2011The Capital Institute rated it it was amazing
Shelves: business, capital-institute, ethics, environment, economics, better-business, real-investing, financial-reform
Daly provides a ‘blueprint’ for a decentralized economy built around small communities and makes specific proposals, including a tax on industrial polluters, worker participation in management and ownership, reduced military spending and a more self-sufficient national economy, with a lower volume of imports. Intended mainly for economists, the book essentially deconstructs neoclassical economic theory and creates a more ‘holistic’ model that pulls together the idea of the individual, the community and the natural world. Daly discusses the problems with contemporary economic thought as well as suggested policy changes that would lead to an economic society based on community and ecology.
Reviews note that Daly provides a crucial “theoretical edge to the tenets of environmental faith.” (Scott London) The book serves as a strong leader in a new way of thinking about economics that pays special tribute to the community, environment and future generations.
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Franklin
Aug 14, 2008Franklin rated it did not like it
Shelves: environment
I read this as part of an environmentalist reading group started by some people in Terra, a Chicago organization. I hated this book because it's the standard kind of outline of how we can fix the economy by making it more moral. See my comments on Bill McKibben's Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future. (less)
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Utkarsha Singh
Jun 07, 2019Utkarsha Singh rated it really liked it
It is funny that academicians are ready to make bizzare unreal assumptions to prove their mathematical models correct. They do not care whether these assumptions are driving the model and its predictions far away from real world situations. It is funnier to see policy makers then refer to such models to bring out policies that would govern a nation. The book points out how with advancement of technology, and the market, humans have alienated themselves from the bigger picture and are targeting short term individual goals, trying to meet a rational (though apocalyptic) ideal.

The authors want to present a picture of a sustainable market. A market not solely guided by the rational economic thought but also by values and emotions that form an integral part of humanity.
The book brings forth the losses human socities have suffered because of our heightened interest in generating more materialistic goods than investing in a better human condition and a better environment. We may fly a car in a few years time but we surely would have lost our ability to run a mile.

There are beautiful explanations of basic market concepts and interrelations between individuals, communities and capital. The writing is lucid and clarifies the concepts well.
The book becomes a little theistic in the end and may peeve a few radical atheists. (less)
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Laura Brose
Aug 30, 2017Laura Brose rated it it was amazing
This book is huge, because it covers darn near everything wrong with society and economy in recent history. But as the old man without a seat in an Ancient Greek amphitheater said, "you young Athenians know what is right, but it takes a Spartan to do it". (less)
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Oliver Moldenhauer
May 01, 2019Oliver Moldenhauer rated it it was amazing
This book influenced me a lot.
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Matt Barlow
Jul 08, 2012Matt Barlow added it
Unfortunately, I had to put this one down. While I was very excited to read this book based on it's premise, the writing was just too academic for someone like myself with little understanding of economics. (less)
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Mark
Jan 15, 2013Mark rated it liked it
Shelves: 2013
I am on page 116
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Josh Volk
Jul 29, 2008Josh Volk rated it it was amazing
I read the first version of this. Great explanations of economics, what economist mean when they say things, and how people misinterpret. Good ideas on how to change things as well.
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Boghall
Jan 10, 2015Boghall rated it liked it
An important and necessary, but not perhaps the most gripping book.
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Stephen Palmer
Feb 11, 2012Stephen Palmer rated it really liked it
Excellent overview of the economic way forward.
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