Catholic Social Thought and Liberal Institutions: Freedom With JusticeTransaction Publishers - 287 pages Increasingly, the religious leaders of the world are addressing problems of political economy, expressing concern about the poor. But will their efforts actually help the poor? Or harm them? Much depends, Michael Novak asserts, upon what kind of institutions are constructed, that is, upon realism and practicality. His thesis may be simply stated: Although the Catholic church during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries set itself against liberalism as an ideology, it has slowly come to admire liberal institutions such as democracy and free markets. Between the Catholic vision of social justice and liberal institutions, Novak argues, there is a profound consonance (but not identity). First published in 1984 as Freedom with Justice, this new edition adds both a lengthy introduction carrying forward the original argument and a long concluding chapter on Pope John Paul II's controversial new encyclical of early 1988, Sollicitudo Rei Socialis. |
From inside the book
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Page ix
... philosophy . On the one hand , they have learned to love such institutions as they have come to share in the United States and a few other places on earth . On the other hand , Vatican documents and many polemical or catechetical ...
... philosophy . On the one hand , they have learned to love such institutions as they have come to share in the United States and a few other places on earth . On the other hand , Vatican documents and many polemical or catechetical ...
Page x
... philosophy both for its aesthetic vulgarity and for , as they see it , its international failings . Although they are by no means socialists , they share many of the socialists ' critiques of multinational corporations overseas . They ...
... philosophy both for its aesthetic vulgarity and for , as they see it , its international failings . Although they are by no means socialists , they share many of the socialists ' critiques of multinational corporations overseas . They ...
Page xi
... philosophy for the Catholic church or anyone else to recommend as a philosophical basis for human rights . Others , such as Peter Steinfels in The Commonweal and Joseph Walsh in The Catholic World , make the opposite accusation . I do ...
... philosophy for the Catholic church or anyone else to recommend as a philosophical basis for human rights . Others , such as Peter Steinfels in The Commonweal and Joseph Walsh in The Catholic World , make the opposite accusation . I do ...
Page xii
... philosophical propositions . Those philosophical propositions may well be rejected . But do they adequately describe the tacit wisdom , the inner intelligibility , of liberal institutions ? I am certain that they do not . Is official ...
... philosophical propositions . Those philosophical propositions may well be rejected . But do they adequately describe the tacit wisdom , the inner intelligibility , of liberal institutions ? I am certain that they do not . Is official ...
Page xiii
... philosophy . Some truths are well held to be absolute , if democracies are not to be destroyed by their own inner weaknesses . I do not say that Professor Wildavsky needs to share my belief in the necessity of grounding the truths that ...
... philosophy . Some truths are well held to be absolute , if democracies are not to be destroyed by their own inner weaknesses . I do not say that Professor Wildavsky needs to share my belief in the necessity of grounding the truths that ...
Contents
3 | |
4 | |
8 | |
12 | |
16 | |
17 | |
2 The catholic Critique of Liberalism | 19 |
3 The Failures of Liberalism | 22 |
The Development of Nations John XXIII and Paul VI | 126 |
1 The Priority of Individual Men | 127 |
2 At Last The Bill of Rights | 131 |
Paul VI | 133 |
4 Eighty Years After | 140 |
5 The Peace and Justice Establishment | 144 |
Creation Theology Pope John Paul II | 149 |
1 Man as the Subject of Work | 150 |
4 Social Justice | 25 |
5 Political Economy | 32 |
6 From Social Justice to Political Economy | 35 |
An Awareness of Sin The US Catholic Bishops and the US Economy | 39 |
1 Poverty and Welfare | 41 |
2 The Creation of Employment | 48 |
3 Temptations in the Desert | 54 |
THE DEVELOPMENT OF CATHOLIC SOCIAL THOUGHT 18481982 | 59 |
The Architects of Catholic Social Thought | 61 |
1 Wilhelm Emmanuel von Ketteler 18111877 | 62 |
2 Heinrich Pesch 18541926 and Solidarism | 69 |
A Quintessential Liberal John Stuart Mill | 81 |
2 Mills Principles of Political Economy | 87 |
3 Distribution and Other Issues | 96 |
From Politics to Economics Leo XIII and Pius XI | 108 |
2 Quadragesimo Anno | 110 |
3 Solidarism and Corporatism | 115 |
4 World War II | 123 |
2 The Priority of Labor Over Capital | 153 |
4 Ownership | 155 |
5 Invention and Discovery | 157 |
6 Creation Theology | 158 |
ETHOS VIRTUES AND INSTITUTIONS THE FUTURE DEVELOPMENT OF CATHOLIC SOCIAL THOUGHT | 165 |
Catholic Social Thought in the Future Toward a Theology of Commerce and Industry | 167 |
2 The Spirit of Economic Progress | 176 |
Liberation Theology in Practice | 183 |
The Communitarian Individual in American Practice | 195 |
1 Two Assumptions | 196 |
2 Associative Community | 197 |
3 Political Economy | 199 |
4 The Role of Mediating Structures | 201 |
International Economics | 209 |
Pope of Liberty Pope of Creativity John Paul II | 219 |
Notes | 253 |
283 | |
Other editions - View all
Freedom with Justice: Catholic Social Thought and Liberal Institutions Michael Novak No preview available - 1984 |
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