This essays tries to show that Jewish economic ethics as presented by Meir Tamari in With All Your Possessions is ethics for a functioning religious and political community and that it is largely irrelevant to the transactions of modern commercial societies, which require much more abstract ethical rules to function successfully. The relevance of Jewish economic ethics to the formation of public policy in a pluralist and largely secular society will be found almost entirely in whatever witness it manages to provide through the characters of those who submit to its commands and the communities they create.
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References
1.
Brock, Gerard (1988) Review of Tamari (1987), Bulletin of the Association of Christian Economists 11 (Spring.
2.
Smith, Adam (1776/1981) The Wealth of Nations. Indianapolis, IN: Liberty Classics.
3.
Tamari, Meir (1987) 'With All Your Possessions': Jewish Ethics and Economic Life. New York: The Free Press.
4.
Waterman, Anthony (1991) Revolution, Economics and Religion: Christian Political Economy, 1798- 1833. New York: Cambridge University Press.