Thinking about capitalism
(2008)

Nonfiction

eAudiobook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : The Great Courses, 2008
Made available through hoopla
EDITION
Unabridged
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (1 audio file (1080 min.)) : digital

ISBN/ISSN
9781682763827 (sound recording : hoopla Audio Book) MWT12398381, 168276382X (sound recording : hoopla Audio Book) 12398381
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Lecturer: Jerry Z Muller

As the economic system under which you live, capitalism shapes the marketplaces that determine where you live and work, how much you are paid, what you can buy, what you can save, and every other aspect of a society based on monetary exchanges for goods and services. But how much do you really know about capitalism? In these 36 engaging lectures, Professor Jerry Muller of The Catholic University of America takes you deep inside the perspectives on this most important and pervasive force. You'll gain fresh insights that will strengthen your understanding of capitalism's rich history, its fascinating proponents and opponents, and its startling impact on our world. These lectures take you beyond economic analysis to look at how some of the greatest intellects have thought about capitalism and its moral, political, and cultural ramifications. Covering capitalism from its 17th-century beginnings to today's era of globalization, Professor Muller explores some wide-ranging questions. What effect does capitalism have on personal development? What about the unending variety of consumer goods made possible by capitalism? Do the facts support our tendency to think about capitalism as the economic system practiced in "free" countries? Or can capitalism exist in a wide variety of political systems? By placing capitalism in its full context, these lectures will enhance your ability to consider, discuss, and answer these and other critical questions - whatever your point of view. All Lectures: 1. Why Think about Capitalism? 2. The Greek and Christian Traditions 3. Hobbes's Challenge to the Traditions 4. Dutch Commerce and National Power 5. Capitalism and Toleration - Voltaire 6. Abundance or Equality - Voltaire vs. Rousseau 7. Seeing the Invisible Hand - Adam Smith 8. Smith on Merchants, Politicians, Workers 9. Smith on the Problems of Commercial Society 10. Smith on Moral and Immoral Capitalism 11. Conservatism and Advanced Capitalism - Burke 12. Conservatism and Periphery Capitalism - M̲ser 13. Hegel on Capitalism and Individuality 14. Hamilton, List, and the Case for Protection 15. De Tocqueville on Capitalism in America 16. Marx and Engels - The Communist Manifesto 17. Marx's Capital and the Degradation of Work 18. Matthew Arnold on Capitalism and Culture 19. Individual and Community - Tṉnies vs. Simmel 20. The German Debate over Rationalization 21. Cultural Sources of Capitalism - Max Weber 22. Schumpeter on Innovation and Resentment 23. Lenin's Critique - Imperialism and War 24. Fascists on Capitalism - Freyer and Schmitt 25. Mises and Hayek on Irrational Socialism 26. Schumpeter on Capitalism's Self-Destruction 27. The Rise of Welfare-State Capitalism 28. Pluralism as Limit to Social Justice - Hayek 29. Herbert Marcuse and the New Left Critique 30. Contradictions of Postindustrial Society 31. The Family under Capitalism 32. Tensions with Democracy - Buchanan and Olson 33. End of Communism, New Era of Globalization 34. Capitalism and Nationalism - Ernest Gellner 35. The Varieties of Capitalism 36. Intrinsic Tensions in Capitalism

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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