Some thoughts on ancient civilizations’ trinity of philosophy, religion and economics

Here are some loud thoughts that reflect upon the relationship that had long existed amidst philosophy, religion and economics in the so-called ‘grand’ civilizations (that had existed during 3100 BC to the beginning of Christian era). Historically, the visions of intellectuals, rulers, men of faiths...

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Autor principal: Soumitra Sharma
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Publicado: Editura ASE Bucuresti 2017
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/6f26ac7c63ca4213bb56498e24399f25
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:6f26ac7c63ca4213bb56498e24399f252021-12-02T00:56:16ZSome thoughts on ancient civilizations’ trinity of philosophy, religion and economics1843-22981844-8208https://doaj.org/article/6f26ac7c63ca4213bb56498e24399f252017-11-01T00:00:00Z https://jpe.ro/pdf.php?id=7957 https://doaj.org/toc/1843-2298https://doaj.org/toc/1844-8208Here are some loud thoughts that reflect upon the relationship that had long existed amidst philosophy, religion and economics in the so-called ‘grand’ civilizations (that had existed during 3100 BC to the beginning of Christian era). Historically, the visions of intellectuals, rulers, men of faiths, and business people have helped drive these civilizations to their zenith. The philosophies, religions, and economics of the time were deeply involved in this process of development, and seem to have acted in unison. Here is an attempt to provoke some fresh thinking on the subject by re-examining this triad relationship of the fundamental spheres of human life. The logic of this paper attempts to raise doubts, if the relationship was ideal and was based on ethical and moral values, as it was proclaimed by the philosophers, pontiffs, politicians and the business leaders of the time.Soumitra SharmaEditura ASE BucurestiarticledominanceethicseconomicsGod(s)philosophy‘quad’religiontrinityEconomics as a scienceHB71-74DEENFRJournal of Philosophical Economics, Vol XI, Iss 1, Pp 83-102 (2017)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language DE
EN
FR
topic dominance
ethics
economics
God(s)
philosophy
‘quad’
religion
trinity
Economics as a science
HB71-74
spellingShingle dominance
ethics
economics
God(s)
philosophy
‘quad’
religion
trinity
Economics as a science
HB71-74
Soumitra Sharma
Some thoughts on ancient civilizations’ trinity of philosophy, religion and economics
description Here are some loud thoughts that reflect upon the relationship that had long existed amidst philosophy, religion and economics in the so-called ‘grand’ civilizations (that had existed during 3100 BC to the beginning of Christian era). Historically, the visions of intellectuals, rulers, men of faiths, and business people have helped drive these civilizations to their zenith. The philosophies, religions, and economics of the time were deeply involved in this process of development, and seem to have acted in unison. Here is an attempt to provoke some fresh thinking on the subject by re-examining this triad relationship of the fundamental spheres of human life. The logic of this paper attempts to raise doubts, if the relationship was ideal and was based on ethical and moral values, as it was proclaimed by the philosophers, pontiffs, politicians and the business leaders of the time.
format article
author Soumitra Sharma
author_facet Soumitra Sharma
author_sort Soumitra Sharma
title Some thoughts on ancient civilizations’ trinity of philosophy, religion and economics
title_short Some thoughts on ancient civilizations’ trinity of philosophy, religion and economics
title_full Some thoughts on ancient civilizations’ trinity of philosophy, religion and economics
title_fullStr Some thoughts on ancient civilizations’ trinity of philosophy, religion and economics
title_full_unstemmed Some thoughts on ancient civilizations’ trinity of philosophy, religion and economics
title_sort some thoughts on ancient civilizations’ trinity of philosophy, religion and economics
publisher Editura ASE Bucuresti
publishDate 2017
url https://doaj.org/article/6f26ac7c63ca4213bb56498e24399f25
work_keys_str_mv AT soumitrasharma somethoughtsonancientcivilizationstrinityofphilosophyreligionandeconomics
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