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Foundations of Economic Personalism is a series of three book-length monographs, each closely examining a significant dimension of the Center for Economic Personalism's unique synthesis of Christian personalism and free-economic market theory. In the aftermath of the momentous geo-political and economic changes of the late 1980s, a small group of Christian social ethicists began to converse with free-market economists over the morality of market activity. This interdisciplinary exchange eventually led to the founding of a new academic subdiscipline under the rubric of economic personalism. These scholars attempt to integrate economic theory, history, and methodology with Christian personalism's stress upon human dignity, humane social structures, and social justice. This final volume in the series systematically applies the praxeological (from the first volume) and theoretical (from the second volume) foundations of the personalist tradition to free-market economic theory. Unlike the previous two, this work defends economic liberty in theologically sensitive terms that reference the personalist tradition, without compromising the disciplinary integrity of either economics or social ethics.
About the author
Anthony J. Santelli, Jr. is President of the Coalition for Local Sovereignty Jeffrey Sikkenga is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Ashland University. Rev. Robert A. Sirico is President of the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty, of which he is also a co-founder. He co-edited The Social Agenda: A Collection of Magisterial Texts (2000). Steven Yates is an independent writer and author of Civil Wrongs: What Went Wrong with Affirmative Action (1994). Gloria Zo-iga is a research fellow at the Center for Economic Personalism.
Summary
This text, the final book in the three volume "Foundations of Economic Personalism" series, systematically applies the praxeological (from the first volume) and theoretical (from the second volume) foundations of the personalist tradition to free-market economic theory.