2013
DOI: 10.1108/ijse-08-2012-0161
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Once upon a time: the neo‐Thomist natural law approach to social economics

Abstract: PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to understand why the neo‐Thomist natural law approach to social economics does not represent a trustworthy epistemological reference for the current social economists but, rather, definitively belongs to the past history of economics.Design/methodology/approachThe approach ventures beyond an epistemological, methodological, and historical analysis of the causes that led to the rediscovery of Thomism, its golden age, and its abandonment. The theoretical and practical content… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The social doctrine is the result of long‐lasting debates among diverse scholarly perspectives. Neo‐Thomist philosophers successfully introduced a natural‐law approach to social economics that tended to favor a corporatist view of the economy (Sandonà 2013). This solidary or organic view of the economy was deeply rooted in Italy, where the Roman Catholic Church traditionally had a central role in culture, politics, and the economy 1 .…”
Section: Introduction: Catholic Solidarism In Postwar Italymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The social doctrine is the result of long‐lasting debates among diverse scholarly perspectives. Neo‐Thomist philosophers successfully introduced a natural‐law approach to social economics that tended to favor a corporatist view of the economy (Sandonà 2013). This solidary or organic view of the economy was deeply rooted in Italy, where the Roman Catholic Church traditionally had a central role in culture, politics, and the economy 1 .…”
Section: Introduction: Catholic Solidarism In Postwar Italymentioning
confidence: 99%