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The essays in this volume outline and explore concrete approaches to concerns originating in the contemporary practice and theory of our liberal decentralized market-based economic system (aka “capitalism”). In this system, mutuality has been established and accepted as a prime principle in addressing our interdependence. Now, however, mounting regulations notwithstanding, doubts about the sufficiency of this principle are not only increasingly widespread, they are also increasingly confirmed. Accordingly, the essays here explore whether and how we might help the economic system evolve further into one where mutuality is more systematically complemented by morality. Some such evolution seems necessary and even unavoidable if the economy is to abet desirable outcomes and not only output. When it comes to economic power, its regulation was clearly meant to complement not substitute its education.
Philosophy has a natural role in informing such reflection, and the essays here integrate its moral perspectives with the analysis of social science. Indeed, one core feature of this volume is that, by design, the majority of the essays are co-authored by philosophers and social scientists. (It is not every day that reputed scholars of finance co-author with distinguished moral philosophers.) The aim has been to explore which assumptions of standard social science imported into the world of business merit scrutiny and evolution—how even in a liberal economy moral ideals and reasoning might inform and influence economic action. What processes of reasoning (including those suggested in constructivist philosophy) offer promise? What organizational and systemic evolution may be necessary to enact a more philosophical (as opposed to a more political) economy? What future research and role for education is required to shape and “correct” actors’ interests, preferences, and conduct?
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