From homo economicus to homo dignus: Values and the indispensability of patristics for economics, even after the Enlightenment

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientific

    Abstract

    Before economic science developed into an independent discipline in the eighteenth century, economicquestions were the stuff of theological treatises. In summae such as those of the realist Thomas Aquinas, andin the Collectorium of the nominalist Gabriel Biel, questions of human behavior, virtues and vices in socialand economic transactions and relations were addressed in the broader context of religion and theology. Butas economics became independent as a scientific discipline, God disappeared from economics. In this paper,the problem is addressed that the scientific standards that apply in economics and theology seem to excludeinterdisciplinary cooperation. Then it is pointed out that the opposite is in fact the case: the methods used ineconomics and theology are not the same, but complementary. It will become clear that it is useful to rekindlethe time-honored bonds between economics and theology as scientific disciplines, in order to deepen and enrichthe human view that underlies economic research. Finally, a concrete example is provided of how theologians can help economists to gain a more precise and deeper understanding of the human phenomenon, which willbe of use to them as they refine their research hypotheses. It is shown that theology can be of added value bybroadening the ‘economic view of human beings’. The study of Scriptural and patristic sources, especially theworks of St. Augustine, can help to refine and deepen the meaning of this word, precisely with a view to theoryformation in economics.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1-13
    Number of pages13
    JournalCuestiones Teológicas
    Volume49
    Issue number112
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2022

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