Sumario: | "This Handbook presents what world and regional religions teach about economic morality. It also compares the major religions in their positions on various social, business, and policy themes, such as feminism, competition, and the ecology, among others. This Handbook closes with an analytical synthesis that presents and explains the patterns that emerge from the various religions in this Handbook and its thematic chapters. Readers will find a remarkable convergence in religions' teachings on economic morality, despite their wide differences in dogma, ecclesial structures, and social practices. This confluence can be traced to similarities in the underlying anthropologies and cosmologies of these faiths. Readers will also discover that these religions' economic teachings are the antithesis of contemporary market ethos, policy, and praxis. This Handbook underscores a symbiosis between religion and economic life as they mutually enrich each other. On the one hand, religion improves the efficiency and efficacy of economic life by lowering the frictional and monitoring costs of market operations. Virtuous market participants internalize norms of good economic conduct and behave accordingly. On the other hand, socioeconomic life offers manifold enticements, comforts, and overindulgences that paradoxically push devout adherents to invest themselves even further in their beliefs. Socioeconomic life provides an opportunity for religions to build strong faith communities and for believers to reify their religion in their economic conduct. This Handbook presents the richness, nuances, and rationale of religions and their economic ethics. It shows that they share far more than divide them, at least when it comes to economic morality"--
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