: Luigino Bruni
: The Economy of Salvation Ethical and Anthropological Foundations of Market Relations in the First Two Books of the Bible
: Springer-Verlag
: 9783030040826
: 1
: CHF 96.60
:
: Volkswirtschaft
: English
: 195
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

This book provides a systematic commentary on the first two books of the Bible: Genesis and Exodus. Drawing on these two essential books, it subsequently offers new readings of several issues relevant for today's economic and social life.

Western Humanism has its own founding cultural and symbolic codes. One of them is the Bible, which has for millennia provided a wealth of expressions on politics and love, death and economy, hope and doom. Biblical stories have been revived and reinterpreted by hundreds of generations, and have informed many of our most beautiful works of art, not to mention the dreams of children and adults alike. And they have given us hope during the many painful times of exile and oppression that we have gone through, and are going through still.

Among the books of the Bible, in both the Jewish and Christian traditions, Genesis and Exodus represent the true foundation of biblical theology and anthropology, but in them we also find the roots of the culture of markets, money and commerce, which would go on to flourish during the Middle Ages and ultimately form the 'spirit of capitalism' (Max Weber) or the 'religion of capitalism' (Walter Benjamin) in the modern era. 

This book examines the Biblical foundations of our conception of social relations, and offers new insights on the present economic and social discourse. 


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Luigino Bruni is professor of Economics at Lumsa University, Rome. He studies ethics and economics, philosophy, history of ideas, and the links between economics and theology. In the last years he started to work in the biblical tradition from an anthropological point of view.

Acknowledgments6
Introduction: A Journey to the End of the Night7
References11
Contents13
Part I: Genesis15
Chapter 1: Saving Glances in Times of Exile16
Chapter 2: Counterparts – From the Very Beginning19
Chapter 3: The Way Home: Inhabiting the Realm of the Human23
Chapter 4: We Are All Abel’s Heirs26
Chapter 5: And Noah Rebuilt the Rainbow30
Chapter 6: Heaven Is Not Above Babel34
Chapter 7: Towards the Land of the Children38
Chapter 8: Hagar and Her Many Sisters41
Chapter 9: Faithfulness Throughout the Unexpected45
Chapter 10: The Promise Has No Owners49
Chapter 11: The Word that’s Irreplaceable53
Chapter 12: The Gate of Heaven Is a Voice57
Chapter 13: The Way: To State and Cultivate the Alliance61
Chapter 14: Forgiving Is a Blessing Struggle65
Chapter 15: Why the World Doesn’t End69
Chapter 16: Full of Days but not Fulfilled Any More73
Chapter 17: The Gift of the Dreamy Brother77
Chapter 18: The Word that Upturns the World81
Chapter 19: Without Price or Clamour85
Chapter 20: The Honest Eyes of the Prophet89
Chapter 21: Brotherhood Cannot Be Bought93
Chapter 22: Brothers, But Never Without Their Father97
Chapter 23: Beggars of Blessings101
Chapter 24: At the End of the Night – and After105
Part II: Exodus110
Chapter 25: Love Does Not Give in to Power111
Chapter 26: Enriching Cries115
Chapter 27: Thorn Bushes and Liberations119
Chapter 28: Where Real Freedom Begins123
Chapter 29: Loyalty Makes Even the Sky Open127
Chapter 30: The Plagues of Our Invisible Empires131
Chapter 31: The Greatest Liberation135
Chapter 32: Gratuitousness Speaks139
Chapter 33: Salvation Is Dance and Eyes143
Chapter 34: The Law of Daily Bread147
Chapter 35: The Different Words of Equals151
Chapter 36: Words of Heaven and Earth155
Chapter 37: The Only True Image159
Chapter 38: The Dowry of the Earth Is Pure Gift163
Chapter 39: The Treasure of the Seventh Day167
Chapter 40: The Desire to Entrap God171
Chapter 41: The Weight of Common Words175
Chapter 42: The Back and the Face of God179
Chapter 43: The Veil that Reveals the False Ones183
Chapter 44: Work Is Already the Promised Land187
Chapter 45: No Liberator Is Crowned King191