Belmont University

Capitalism and the Common Good

One of my favorite writers and thinkers on the importance of freedom is Fr. Robert Sirico with the Acton Institute. I encourage you to read the text of a recent speech he gave a Hillsdale College, in which he argues that capitalism and its inherent freedom offers the most hope for the common good. Here is an excerpt:

We are all entitled to call ourselves socialist, if by the term we mean that we are devoted to the early socialist goal of the well-being of all members of society. Reason and experience make clear that the means to achieve this is not through central planning by the state, but through political and economic freedom. Thomas Aquinas had an axiom: bonum est diffusivum sui. "The good pours itself out." The good of freedom has indeed poured itself out to the benefit of humanity.

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Fr. Sirico's Hillsdale speech is well worth reading, not only for his insights into the meaning of "Socialism, Free Enterprise and the Common Good," but also for the lesson in history and philsophy. It's a bit politically correct these days to embrace "social capitalism" or "social entrepreneurialism" without question. Fr. Sirico reminds us that we should embrace our quest with a clear-eyed understanding of what it really means.

I attended a meeting a few night ago--thanks, Dr. C, for for the heads up, it was great--in which John Sage of Pura Vida Coffe spoke about social entrepreneurialism. (Well, I'm not sure he spoke about it per se, but it was there in the room.) Like Fr. Sirico, he referred to a scripture passage in the Gospel of Matthew--specifically Matthew 10 where Jesus said "...be wise as serpents and harmless as doves." His point, if I took it right, is that Jesus knew the power of embracing these seemingly contradictory characteristics. So, too, do we capitalists embrace seemingly contradictory characteristics. Though we seek to do good, we are tough-minded and results-driven. Sirico's article, I believe, is in this spirit. His reading of history shows that good intentions, absent the proven values at the core of free enterprise, are not enough. This is really good stuff!

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