triumphguy #98
Free enterprise didn’t exist until there was a free market, with free labour and free trade.
These things did not exist, despite what your authors state.
Repeating conjecture and myopically denying what knowledgeable authors reveal, against the facts, reveals tilting at windmills.
“Augustine also ruled that price was a function not simply of the seller’s costs, but also of the buyer’s desire for the item sold. In this way Augustine gave legitimacy not merely to merchants but to the eventual deep involvement of the Church in the birth of capitalism when it earliest forms began to appear in about the ninth century on the great estates belonging to monastic orders.”
The Victory of Reason, Rodney Stark, p 58; cites Lewis Mumford, 1967,
The Myth of the Machine, Vol 1].
Stark notes (p 58) that “this was not merely a sort of proto-capitalism involving only the ‘institutional preconditions of capitalism… but a version of the developed characteristics of capitalism itself.’ Collins referred to this as ‘religious capitalism,’ adding that the dynamism of the medieval economy was primarily that of the Church.’ ” [Randall Collins, op. cit. p 47-52].
lynnvinc #102
Let’s please get over this “the Church is gung-ho over capitalism,”
Instead of concentrating on a term – “capitalism” – try concentrating on the Church’s teaching on free enterprise – as recommended by the acknowledged St John Paul II that it is ‘more appropriate to speak of a “business economy”, “market economy” or simply “free economy”.’
Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI has, after all, shown the way: “Society does not have to protect itself from the market, as if the development of the latter were ipso facto to entail the death of authentically human relations…Therefore it is not the instrument that must be called to account, but individuals, their moral conscience and their personal and social responsibility.” (
Caritas et Veritate, Benedict XVI, 2009, #36).
So yes, people, are greedy and selfish and that is precisely why society is beset by so many problems, and the bureaucracy of the State is no solution, only the practice of free enterprise by those possessing the virtues of prudence, justice, fortitude and temperance will help society.
That’s why we have laws to seek and punish those who steal, cheat, swindle, and worse crimes. That’s why we have the Catholic Church to guide us – She who invented charity in the West. It’s time to face reality.
As to the state of mankind “individuals”], Fr James V Schall, S.J., in
Does Catholicism Still Exist?, Alba House 1994, p 198, also succinctly points out: “But now that capitalism is successful, mankind again realizes the insufficiency of material possessions of themselves. Nothing higher is around to live for or even to die for, so that mankind will become bored. This boredom can easily lead to a decline and fall mentality, a lapse into moral and cultural decadence. Drugs ands dissipation are seen as directly related to this malaise.” Precisely – what Benedict XVI has described as “secularism” and “moral relativism”.
Fr James V Schall, S.J., explains how poverty is overcome, p 184-185:
“Since the Catholic Church wants poverty confronted, since She wants this confrontation to be done justly and with the interest and cooperation of the workers and the poor, She has had to acknowledge, as did the socialist systems themselves, that there are certain ways that must be employed if mankind is to meet its economic problems. These ways can be known and imitated, but they must include a juridical system, profit, enterprise, knowledge, exchange, a market, voluntary organisations, a relatively independent economy, private property, and respect for work and excellence.”
No wealth can be created until it is produced – that’s why the Late Scholastic system works so well to enable everyone to produce some wealth and to do with it as they choose through free-will. Economic laws are based on the principles of human action – of cause and effect involving God-given reason.