Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library

The vice of luxury, economic excess in a consumer age, David Cloutier

Label
The vice of luxury, economic excess in a consumer age, David Cloutier
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The vice of luxury
Nature of contents
dictionariesbibliography
Responsibility statement
David Cloutier
Series statement
The moral traditions series
Sub title
economic excess in a consumer age
Summary
The problem of luxury has been neglected in contemporary Christian theology and philosophy, as well as in the broader social debate about the morality of our common economic life. And according to moral theologian David Cloutier this neglect of luxury has had harmful consequences: Greco-Roman and Judeo-Christian traditions are filled with critiques of luxury as a vice that is destructive both to individual persons and to society. Current and recent studies of economic ethics focus on the structural problems of poverty, of international trade, of workers' rights--but rarely if ever do such studies speak directly to the excesses of the wealthy, including the middle classes of advanced economies. What happened? Why has the unquenchable pursuit of a luxury lifestyle gotten a free pass? In interpreting luxury as a moral problem, Cloutier proposes a new approach to economic ethics that moves beyond pro-market volume anti-market screeds and focuses attention on our everyday economic choices. In Part 1 he surveys the history of Christian attitudes toward luxury and greed and provides a primer on economics; in Part 2 he examines the meaning of luxury and how to develop a prudential ethic of consumption that is compatible with Christian morality
Table Of Contents
Chapter 1. Why Luxury? -- Chapter 2. Luxury in History : A Brief Survey -- Chapter 3. Neglected Vice : How Luxury Degrades Us, Our Work, and Our Communities -- Chapter 4. Neglected Sacramentality : Why Luxury Blocks a Spirituality of our Material Goods -- Chapter 5. Neglecting Positionality : Why Luxury Does Not Necessarily Help the Economy -- Chapter 6. Luxury Defined -- Chapter 7. Luxury and Social Context : Who Has More Than Enough? -- Chapter 8. Luxury and Necessity : What is Enough? -- Chapter 9. Luxury and Sacrament : What's Beyond Enough? -- Conclusion. Resisting with Discipline, Responding with Hope
Content
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