The protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism
Material type: TextPublication details: Angelico Press Kettering 2014Description: 189 pISBN:- 9781621380931
- 306.6 WEB
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Indian Institute of Management LRC General Stacks | Public Policy & General Management | 306.6 WEB (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 006312 |
Browsing Indian Institute of Management LRC shelves, Shelving location: General Stacks, Collection: Public Policy & General Management Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
No cover image available | ||||||||
306.420968 MIS Indigenous knowledge system: traditions and transformations | 306.461 CON Applied sociology of health and illness: a problem-based learning approach | 306.470954 MCG Crafting the nation in colonial India | 306.6 WEB The protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism | 306.76 ROY Cosmopolitan sexuality: gender, embodiments, biopolitics in India | 306.85088677 BHA From the brink of bankruptcy: the DCM story | 306.874 IND Nurturing values |
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism is Max Weber's groundbreaking study of the psychological and spiritual conditions that allowed for the development of capitalist culture. Weber's thesis takes off from startling twin reversals. First, in a reversal of the Marxian thesis that material conditions form the basis for "states of mind," Weber asserts that it is these very mental conditions and associated cultural values that shaped the capitalist world and the human quest for prosperity. More specifically, Weber's insight is that the belief in the moral value of work, encouraged by Calvinist strains of Protestantism, fostered a this-worldly asceticism -- reversing and supplanting the medieval monastic ideal of an other-worldly asceticism. Thus grew, in early modern England and Northern Europe, a new attitude toward the fulfillment of worldly duties -- baptizing, as it were, what would become the unapologetic pursuit of wealth.
As a trenchant and still controversial analysis of how the historical phases of Christianity have conditioned the ethical, political, economic, and social lives of the peoples of the West -- and, later, the world -- Weber's work continues to be a touchstone for the ongoing debate on the origins of capitalism and the future course of economic history.
(https://www.penguinbookshop.com/book/9781621380931)
There are no comments on this title.