Money, Markets, and Merit : The Economic Thought of Leonardus Lessius
by
Wim Decock
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
Book Series
Oxford Studies in the History of Economics
ISBN-10
0197827314
ISBN-13
9780197827314
Publisher
Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint
Oxford University Press Inc
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Dec 17th, 2025
Print length
224 Pages
Product Classification:
Religion & beliefsEconomic historyLegal history
Ksh 11,900.00
Not Yet Published
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This book revisits the legacy of one of the protagonists in the history of economic thought: Leonardus Lessius (1554-1623). In a time marked as much by fierce debates on grace and free will as by doubts about the legitimacy of the first global economy, Lessius offers a glimpse into the interconnectedness between 'meritocratic' ideas on spiritual salvation and material prosperity.
To understand the genesis of the modern economy, we must also investigate its normative foundations. More than a century after Max Weber''s The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, the pursuit of this key methodological intuition remains unfinished. This book revisits the legacy of a neglected protagonist in the history of economic thought: Leonardus Lessius (1554-1623). Lessius'' work provides unique insight into the normative roots of modern economic thought. In a context characterised by the globalization of trade, the rise of stock exchanges, and profound political and religious upheavals, merchants, bankers, and princes eagerly sought his advice to navigate the New World. Praised by Joseph A. Schumpeter as a ''father of modern economic analysis'', Lessius became known in his own time as the ''Oracle of the Netherlands''. His main treatise, ''On Justice and Law'', quickly gained the status of a reference work due to the clarity of its economic observations and Lessius'' brilliant mastery of legal and moral reasoning. He offered practical solutions to a wide range of cases of conscience related to speculation, insurance, insider trading, subprime debt, interest-taking, abuse of market power, monopolies, public banks, safe investment vehicles, and many other economic and financial issues. It certainly was not his intention to turn the whole world into a competitive market without any limits as Lessius deplored humanity''s inclination to succumb to the ''sacred hunger for gold''. However, he did wish to encourage effort, hard work and clever dealings, thus contributing significantly to the normative justification of modern commerce and finance. In a time marked as much by fierce debates on grace and free will as by doubts about the legitimacy of the first global economy, Lessius offers a glimpse into the interconnectedness between ideas on spiritual salvation and material prosperity.
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