The charismatic principle in social life
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Bibliographic Information
The charismatic principle in social life
(Routledge frontiers of political economy, 166)
Routledge, 2013
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Max Weber laid the foundations for the meaning of 'charisma' in modern secular usage. This new volume argues for the importance of the 'charismatic principle' in history, economics and society.
This volume brings together a number of contributors at the cross section between economics, theology, sociology and politics in order to set a research agenda for the following issues:
What does it means to have a 'charism'? How does it work in society? How might one distinguish a 'charism' from a talent? Are 'charism's given only to "special" people, or are they also present in ordinary people? Is a 'charism' necessarily associated with religion, or, is it, as we submit, possible to imagine 'charisms' at work within a secular perspective?
Which are the principle perspectives of the role of 'charisms' in social history? How have the 'charisms' of noted personalities (e.g., Benedict, Francis, Gandhi) changed economic and social history?
What insights might be drawn from 'civil charisms' such as the cooperative movement, non-profit organizations, social economy, and values-based organizations?
This book seeks to answer these questions through the employment of an interdisciplinary perspective, which examines the theme of the charismatic principle in social life in different fields of application.
Table of Contents
Foreward: The Role of Charisma in Social Life Luigino Bruni and Barbara Sena 1. Economy of Life: Charismatic Dynamics and Relational Goods Adrian Pabst 2. The Role of Charisma, Ethics and Machiavellianism in Economic and Civil Life Tamas Kovacs 3. The Charismatic Principle in an American and Democratic Context David J. O'Brien 4. Dr. Martin Luther King and the American Civil Rights Movement: Charismatic and Institutional Perspectives Ian Weinstein 5. Charism and Institution: An Organizational Theory Case Study of the Economy of Communion Jeanne Buckeye and John Gallagher 6. Benedictine Tradition and Good Governance Emil Inauen, Bruno S. Frey, Katja Rost and Margit Osterloh 7. Opus Dei: Prayer or Labor? The Spirituality of Work in Sts. Benedict and Escriva James Bernard Murphy 8. Values-based enterprises: the good practices of Italian SMEs, passionately committed to people, environment and community Mara Del Baldo The role of the charismatic economist E.F. Schumacher in economic and civil life: CSR and Beyond Hendrik Opdebeeck
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