Why do we work so hard at our jobs, day after day? Why is a job well done important to us? We know there is more to a career than money and prestige, but what exactly do we mean by "fulfillment"? These are old but important questions. They belong with some newly discovered ones: Why are people in business more religious than the population as a whole? What do people of business know, and what do they do, that anchors their faith? In this ground-breaking and inspiring book, Michael Novak ties together these crucial questions by explaining the meaning of work as a vocation. Work should be more…mehr
Why do we work so hard at our jobs, day after day? Why is a job well done important to us? We know there is more to a career than money and prestige, but what exactly do we mean by "fulfillment"? These are old but important questions. They belong with some newly discovered ones: Why are people in business more religious than the population as a whole? What do people of business know, and what do they do, that anchors their faith? In this ground-breaking and inspiring book, Michael Novak ties together these crucial questions by explaining the meaning of work as a vocation. Work should be more than just a job -- it should be a calling. This book explains an important part of our lives in a new way, and readers will instantly recognize themselves in its pages. A larger proportion than ever before of the world's Christians, Jews, and other peoples of faith are spending their working lives in business. Business is a profession worthy of a person's highest ideals and aspirations, fraught with moral possibilities both of great good and of great evil. Novak takes on agonizing problems, such as downsizing, the tradeoffs that must sometimes be faced between profits and human rights, and the pitfalls of philanthropy. He also examines the daily questions of how an honest day's work contributes to the good of many people, both close at hand and far away. Our work connects us with one another. It also makes possible the universal advance out of poverty, and it is an essential prerequisite of democracy and the institutions of civil society. This book is a spiritual feast, for everyone who wants to examine how to make a life through making a living.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Michael Novak is a theologian and former U.S. ambassador who currently holds the George Frederick Jewett Chair in Religion and Public Policy at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington. He is the 1994 winner of the Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion, and the author of over twenty-five books on philosophy, theology, politics, economics, and culture, including The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism. He lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife.
Inhaltsangabe
Contents Introduction PLENTY ISN'T ENOUGH Bored with Making Money The Anti-Business Skeptics Three Specific Objections A Glance Ahead Chapter One WHAT IS A CALLING? Callings Four Characteristics of a Calling Can a Calling Remain Tacit? Can a Calling Be Entirely Secular? Meteorites Across the Sky Chapter Two LITTLE-KNOWN FACTS ABOUT BUSINESS An Overview The Most Religious Elites Today Most Religious People Work in Business Morality and Us The Only Moral Majority: Sinners Chapter Three A MORALLY SERIOUS CALLING Andrew Carnegie, Wealth Creator The Moral Case for the System qua "System" Sinners in the System Wrong About Capitalism Chapter Four FOR THE POOR AND FOR DEMOCRACY One Cheer Is Quite Enough But What Is "Capitalism"? Capitalism Is Better for the Poor A Necessary Condition for Democracy A Necessary Condition for Capitalism Capitalism Reduces Envy The Tyranny of a Majority Natural Liberty -- Political and Economic Moral Vigilance Chapter Five VIRTUE IN THE MODERN CITY Virtue in the Ancient City Passions and Reason Reflection and Choice Practical Wisdom and Other Virtues A Modem Culture of Virtue? Our Incurious Elites Business Depends on Virtue Chapter Six THREE CARDINAL VIRTUES OF BUSINESS The Virtue of Creativity The Virtue of Building Community The Virtue of Practical Realism And Don't Forget the Fun of It! Chapter Seven SEVEN PLUS SEVEN CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITIES Mediating Structures, Civil Society Seven Internal Responsibilities Seven Responsibilities from Outside Business Special Business Codes A Moral Institution Chapter Eight BUSINESS AND HUMAN RIGHTS The Transnational Firm Morality Has Costs Chapter Nine MAKING THINGS BETTER The Bad Side of Downsizing New Ideas for Labor Unions Organizing to Help the Homeless Solidarity with the World's Poor Chapter Ten GIVING IT ALL AWAY Carnegie's Strategy In Giving, Be Vigilant: Caveat Donor! The Glory of the Nation Endnotes Bibliography arAcknowledgments Index
Contents Introduction PLENTY ISN'T ENOUGH Bored with Making Money The Anti-Business Skeptics Three Specific Objections A Glance Ahead Chapter One WHAT IS A CALLING? Callings Four Characteristics of a Calling Can a Calling Remain Tacit? Can a Calling Be Entirely Secular? Meteorites Across the Sky Chapter Two LITTLE-KNOWN FACTS ABOUT BUSINESS An Overview The Most Religious Elites Today Most Religious People Work in Business Morality and Us The Only Moral Majority: Sinners Chapter Three A MORALLY SERIOUS CALLING Andrew Carnegie, Wealth Creator The Moral Case for the System qua "System" Sinners in the System Wrong About Capitalism Chapter Four FOR THE POOR AND FOR DEMOCRACY One Cheer Is Quite Enough But What Is "Capitalism"? Capitalism Is Better for the Poor A Necessary Condition for Democracy A Necessary Condition for Capitalism Capitalism Reduces Envy The Tyranny of a Majority Natural Liberty -- Political and Economic Moral Vigilance Chapter Five VIRTUE IN THE MODERN CITY Virtue in the Ancient City Passions and Reason Reflection and Choice Practical Wisdom and Other Virtues A Modem Culture of Virtue? Our Incurious Elites Business Depends on Virtue Chapter Six THREE CARDINAL VIRTUES OF BUSINESS The Virtue of Creativity The Virtue of Building Community The Virtue of Practical Realism And Don't Forget the Fun of It! Chapter Seven SEVEN PLUS SEVEN CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITIES Mediating Structures, Civil Society Seven Internal Responsibilities Seven Responsibilities from Outside Business Special Business Codes A Moral Institution Chapter Eight BUSINESS AND HUMAN RIGHTS The Transnational Firm Morality Has Costs Chapter Nine MAKING THINGS BETTER The Bad Side of Downsizing New Ideas for Labor Unions Organizing to Help the Homeless Solidarity with the World's Poor Chapter Ten GIVING IT ALL AWAY Carnegie's Strategy In Giving, Be Vigilant: Caveat Donor! The Glory of the Nation Endnotes Bibliography arAcknowledgments Index
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