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  1. Commerce and Corruption.Ryan Patrick Hanley - 2008 - European Journal of Political Theory 7 (2):137-158.
    Modern commercial society has been criticized for attenuating virtue and inhibiting the ethical self-realization of its participants. But Adam Smith, a founding father of liberal commercial modernity, anticipated precisely this critique and took specific measures to circumvent it. This article presents these measures via an analysis of his response to the critique of liberal commercial modernity set forth by Rousseau. It principally argues that Smith's distinctions of the love of praise from the love of praiseworthiness, and the love of glory (...)
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  • Die Philosophie des Geldes.Georg Simmel - 1902 - Mind 11 (41):103-108.
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  • Mobilizing the Consumer.Peter Miller & Nikolas Rose - 1997 - Theory, Culture and Society 14 (1):1-36.
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  • (1 other version)Two Treatises of Government.Roland Hall - 1966 - Philosophical Quarterly 16 (65):365.
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  • The Market: Ethics, Knowledge, and Politics.John O'Neill - 1998 - Routledge.
    The author draws on considerable research in this area to provide an overdue critical evaluation of the limits of the market, and future prospects for non-market socialism.
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  • The King's Two Bodies: A Study in Medieval Political Theology.E. H. KANTORWICZ - 1957
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  • The Market. Ethics, Knowledge and Politics.Mark Peacock - 2000 - Environmental Values 9 (1):111-113.
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  • Market Society: Markets and Modern Social Theory.Sam Binkley - 2002 - Sociological Theory 20 (2):278-281.
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  • Satisfaction for Whom? Freedom for What? Theology and the Economic Theory of the Consumer.Mark G. Nixon - 2006 - Journal of Business Ethics 70 (1):39-60.
    The economic theory of the consumer, which assumes individual satisfaction as its goal and individual freedom to pursue satisfaction as its sine qua non, has become an important ideological element in political economy. Some have argued that the political dimension of economics has evolved into a kind of "secular theology" that legitimates free market capitalism, which has become a kind of "religion" in the United States [Nelson: 1991, Reaching for Heaven on Earth: The Theological Meaning of Economics. ; 2001, Economics (...)
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  • Possessive Individualism and Political Realities. [REVIEW]Bertram Morris - 1965 - Ethics 75 (3):207-214.
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