La constitución de la ética: la ética del mercado y su crítica

 

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Auteur: Hinkelammert, Franz J.
Format: artículo original
Statut:Versión publicada
Date de publication:2022
Description:This article analyzes the ethics of the market and how it works within the latter. In the first place, the understanding of this ethics is developed from Plato, through authors such as Adam Smith, Kant, Max Weber and Wittgenstein. Then, it is argued that the uncontrolled capitalist economy implies a collective suicide that is not a conscious goal, but a consequence of what is being done. Faced with this panorama, the affirmative of life is articulated as an alternative to that collective suicide. The theory of means-end acts is problematized saying that the means-end relationship is always connected with life-death judgments, something that Marx was clear about. It is argued that the life-death criterion must be discovered at the center of the calculation of the market and its ethics.  
Pays:Portal de Revistas UCR
Institution:Universidad de Costa Rica
Repositorio:Portal de Revistas UCR
Langue:Español
OAI Identifier:oai:portal.ucr.ac.cr:article/53466
Accès en ligne:https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/filosofia/article/view/53466
Mots-clés:criterio vida-muerte
ética
Max Weber
racionalidad
juicios de hecho
life-death criterion
ethics
rationality
fact-judgments