Market complicity and Christian ethics / Albino Barrera.

"The marketplace is a remarkable social institution that has greatly extended our reach so shoppers in the West can now buy fresh-cut flowers, vegetables, and tropical fruits grown halfway across the globe even in the depths of winter. However, these expanded choices have also come with conside...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Barrera, Albino (Author)
Corporate Author: Cambridge Books Online
Format: Ebook
Language:English
Published: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2011.
Series:New studies in Christian ethics ; v. 29.
Subjects:
Online Access:Cambridge Books on Core
Description
Summary:"The marketplace is a remarkable social institution that has greatly extended our reach so shoppers in the West can now buy fresh-cut flowers, vegetables, and tropical fruits grown halfway across the globe even in the depths of winter. However, these expanded choices have also come with considerable moral responsibilities as our economic decisions can have far-reaching effects by either ennobling or debasing human lives. Albino Barrera examines our own moral responsibilities for the distant harms of our market transactions from a Christian viewpoint, identifying how the market's division of labour makes us unwitting collaborators in others' wrongdoing and in collective ills. His important account covers a range of different subjects, including law, economics, philosophy, and theology, in order to identify the injurious ripple effects of our market activities"--
"Christian ethics has increasingly assumed a central place within academic theology. At the same time the growing power and ambiguity of modern science and the rising dissatisfaction within the social sciences about claims to value-neutrality have prompted renewed interest in ethics within the secular academic world. There is, therefore, a need for studies in Christian ethics which, as well as being concerned with the relevance of Christian ethics to the present-day secular debate, are well informed about parallel discussions in recent philosophy, science or social science"--
Physical Description:1 online resource (xii, 312 pages).
Format:Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages 286-299) and index.
DOI:10.1017/CBO9780511758614
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