Are markets amoral?
It is the very amorality of markets that invites immorality. They encourage us to view interactions through the lens of pure cost and benefit, as though this were a value-free zone.
ReadIt is the very amorality of markets that invites immorality. They encourage us to view interactions through the lens of pure cost and benefit, as though this were a value-free zone.
Read“There are the bones of a very interesting book here. But what Brinkmann presents us with is a diary that reads like the notes for a book he couldn’t find the willpower to write.”
ReadAristotle on Positive Mental Attitude and more in the latest Microphilosophy newsletter.
Read“As Julian Baggini steps down from his role as academic director of the Royal Institute of Philosophy, he shuns the usual comforting, ego-boosting valedictory and reckons with his own shortcomings.”
ReadOur problem is not that we have too much individuality but we have the wrong kind, an ersatz version that leaves us closer to the dystopia of uniformity than we dare to believe.
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