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That is, is it wrong to want to make money when there is no reason (mediate or immediate) to make money?
No. As long as you are not exploiting anyone or being illicit in your actions. You never know when you will need a “rainy day fund” or how those profits in the present may affect your future – for instance you may need a influx of capital to help expand your business or invest in a new venture. I am not saying be money orientated but there is nothing wrong with earning extra money if down lawfully and in accordance with good conscience. Besides if you make too much money, don’t need it or feel guilty about it donate it to your Parish or Diocese where they can put it to good use. They always have a need.That is, is it wrong to want to make money when there is no reason (mediate or immediate) to make money?
But say that I wake up and say to myself, “I think I’ll just make a bunch of money” wouldn’t that be a problem for the same reason that interest is a problem, that is, because money is useful for other things and shouldn’t be wanted just for no reason?I suppose it depends on your conscience. Some people want money just for the bragging rights or pride or power for themselves, and that of course is wrong. But if you simply have excess of money in profits after working honestly, then there’s nothing wrong with that.
It’s not easy to give general answers to that because people’s motives and situations differ.
I am not going to debate you, but according to Catholic Doctrine, there is absolutely nothing wrong to make a profit for any reason what so ever, as long as the transaction was honest in its conception and execution.But say that I wake up and say to myself, “I think I’ll just make a bunch of money” wouldn’t that be a problem for the same reason that interest is a problem, that is, because money is useful for other things and shouldn’t be wanted just for no reason?
Why would that be wrong if it is wrong?
Not wrong as long as it’s honest.But say that I wake up and say to myself, “I think I’ll just make a bunch of money” wouldn’t that be a problem for the same reason that interest is a problem, that is, because money is useful for other things and shouldn’t be wanted just for no reason?
Why would that be wrong if it is wrong?
Bingo!I am not going to debate you, but according to Catholic Doctrine, there is absolutely nothing wrong to make a profit for any reason what so ever, as long as the transaction was honest in its conception and execution.
To think that profit per se is immoral is Marxist and Socialistic thinking which goes against the tenets of Catholicism.
End of argument!
Why would it be wrong? Is it wrong to fish for pleasure rather than taking them home to eat? Is it wrong to walk more than my health requires? Is it wrong to go to Mass on sunday more than once? Is it wrong to extend a drive in the country?That is, is it wrong to want to make money when there is no reason (mediate or immediate) to make money?
RR does not condemn capitalism; it condemns abuses of capitalism. Here is a quote from Pope Benedict affirming the free market (given to us by Abu):Not wrong as long as it’s honest.
Anyway you might want to read the encyclical Rerum Novarum by Leo XIII. It talks about the basic right for people to make profit and the proper use of money. It does, however, criticise capitalism – just as it criticises Communism.
It’s not easy to read (what constitutes five sentences for us constituted one sentence for Leo and you’d need to take notes just to understand it) but it contains good wisdom.
In short, a worker is entitled to his own wages, to dispose of them as he pleases, since they are his property by right; and, equal/communal/social possession of goods is bad for society, which thrives on variety (of work, of citizens, and of income) that is peculiar to each member of society.The remedy they [socialists] propose is manifestly against justice. For, every man has by nature the right to possess property as his own. . . .
The first and most fundamental principle, therefore, if one would undertake to alleviate the condition of the masses, must be the inviolability of private property. . . . Social and public life can be maintained only by means of various kinds of capacity for business and the playing of many parts; and each man, as a rule, chooses the part which suits his own peculiar domestic condition.
I do not think those quotes from Rerum Novarum say what you want them to say, nor do they answer the original question.
This does not, however, justify Greed: to gather things to excess; to take rather than to give.
Are business monopolies – which legally allow someone to turn as much profit as he can, even though it destroys another man’s profit – just?How possibly does he do his fellow man an injustice? Please please please answer this; I am entriqued by such a proposition
…should be accompanied by Charity, which simultaneously is the means and the bonum.What is your basis for “…should be…” should be accompanied by… what is the objective what is the bonum???
I am a steward, not of my own mandates, but God’s. I – and every steward – am responsible to oversee myself, firstly, and my neighbor as for myself. Isn’t it a great act of Charity to admonish the sinner? Not judge him, but gently and charitably remind him of his duties to God and his fellows and of the wages of sin?And who the policeman to oversee this? And who is to determine if one is following your mandate? Where is this god or these gods?
Remember the hunger of Erysichthon? Cursed with undying hunger for chopping down a sacred tree, he ends up eating himself. Greed has no limits. It is an intemperate desire for created things over their Creator. It will not die, but kill to feed itself. Creation only gives a taste of its Creator, a taste meant to fuel desire for Him. How can fare meant to increase our desire satisfy us? Only that which we desire – namely, God – can do so.What are you asking? "…if profit was ‘morally’ limited??? can you give an example?
God rest old Aristotle; but I have a concern with his distaste for our retail friends. Retail endeavors insure that we consumers get a better product by bringing a product to us in a more orderly fashion than the producer can, they segregate the merchandise so that we can better understand its different qualities, brings the product to us - illiminates travel. Much more can be said on behalf of thier services. But what concerns me is the idea that one can judge another’s heart: No matter how much an owner of a business holds his profits (hords his money) is no indication of the retailer’s heart. There are a hundred reasons to put money in retention: for research, for bad times, for new inventory, for family emergencies etc. How much is the best, and how can we judge him if he is being greedy? Greed is a part of the heart; it can not be determined by objective analysis, but judging others is a most satisfactory indeavor by those who lack wisdom.Well there are problems with the all profits are evil thesis since it implies that no profit is good which is obviously wrong.
But it is also problematic to say that there are no unnecessary profits because then, the whole idea of the miser or the person who spends too much time making money, is rendered impossible. But that seems absurd: one can easily imagine a possible universe where someone both makes money and doesn’t use it or doesn’t use all of it to reinvest, etc.
These profits, which are not even useful for leisure or as a buffer/insurance policy, are precisely what Aristotle was against and that is why he was against the retail trade, because he saw that it was essentially a bunch of merchants who accumulated more money than they needed to cont. business and thereby they had more money than they needed for their desires. And to have such a sum is to act irrationally.
So one could say that profits which are useless are bad but profits that are useful are not bad.
And neither of these come into the context of hording; albeit, this discussion can be considered ex ante and the only reason to participate is to defend the businessman.But there are some problems here too, namely that something can be either ex ante useless or ex post useless. Now the former means that it is just useless simply while the latter means that it becomes useful after the act.
So if I make useless sums, and then invest these sums to make more useless sums, am I doing something useful with my profits? I would answer that you are perhaps less guilty of being avaricious but you are still guilty of liking money though it contributes nothing to you or your household’s leisure. In so far as this person’s profits are useful to his business, then perhaps he should keep them, but not insofar as his profits are just heaped up in large vaults.
Please give examples of “useless” profits, “useless” sums?any thoughts?
I’m assuming that the pope is saying either that it is not true that market expansion always causes evil or that an object of positive economics (markets) has no per se connection with moral effects. Not saying that there is no possible universe where the expansion of the market has ill moral effects. I would not deny either of these. If there is another interpretation then share it with me please.Please give examples of “useless” profits, “useless” sums?
Pope Benedict gave us this:
"Society does not have to protect itself from the market, as if the development of the market were ipso fact to entail the death of the authentically human relations… therfore it is not the market that must be call to account, but individuals, their moral conscience and their personal and soical responsibility (Caritas et Veritate, Beneict XVI, 2009, #39
The Pope is not referring to a market expansion; but rather, the market - more clearly, the free market. Whether it is expanding or not expanding has not relevance to the topic, morallity.I’m assuming that the pope is saying either that it is not true that market expansion always causes evil or that an object of positive economics (markets) has no per se connection with moral effects.
By “universe” I assume you mean economy? Anywhere, the free market has been left alone morality flurished, income expanded, products were better made and distributed, the poor became less poor. Look at Hong Kong today.Not saying that there is no possible universe where the expansion of the market has ill moral effects. I would not deny either of these. If there is another interpretation then share it with me please.
Yes, the market doesn’t determine the soul’s heart; albeit, quicker than you can say Maynard Keysen (spelling) hords of people will tell you if one is rich he is a theif, if one hords he is greedy. As if they, have a special eye for the soul.So I’m not afraid of the market as if it’s progress logically entailed the death of per se human love. After all, one can imagine a situation where profits grow and people are okay.
Lord have mercy! Dear God help! When profits grow they do not cause vice. Individuals cause viceBut I’m talking about a situation where profits grow and this causes vice
May I suggest, this person is very will equiped to handle this unfortunate perdictament being rich and overly satisfied he has the money to purchase the help to handle his excesses.An example of useless profit would be, when someone makes money but has no idea of how to use it in the sense that a sated man has no idea of how to finish a burrito.
Well, if making money is the only reason a person is in business, that all he wants is green-back or coin or a deposit and only these and not what they will purchase he has not sinned unless this desire takes his heart from Our Lord. But keep in mind he does not hurt the economy; in fact he helps it.Likewise, useless profit would be to intentionally enter business just to make money as if money=good for itself.
How do you define profits? I’m just saying that there is some imaginable situation (a “universe” from the logical p.o.v.) where making profits can cause evil. This is far from saying that markets (as acts of business or what comes to the same, as acts of profit generators) are bad for they are per se good (we all want profit) but they are also, in a sense, indifferent to good or bad just like sex (which is good) is indifferent to good or bad; for there is such a thing as badly ordered sex (porn, for instance).Lord have mercy! Dear God help! When profits grow they do not cause vice. Individuals cause vice
fine, I’m just saying that his excesses are a problem that he needs help with and that before getting-the-help, he was experiencing a vice. There is at least one situation, given the meaning of the words “market” “vice” etc. where these words “market” and “vice” are consistent w/each other.May I suggest, this person is very will equiped to handle this unfortunate perdictament being rich and overly satisfied he has the money to purchase the help to handle his excesses.