Work detail

On the Morals of an Economic Man

Author: Mgr. Tomáš Sedláček
Year: 2001 - summer
Leaders: prof. Ing. Lubomír Mlčoch CSc.
Consultants:
Work type: Economic Theory
Masters
Language: English
Pages: 97
Awards and prizes: Josef Hlávka Award
M.A. with distinction from the Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences for an excellent state-final examination performance and for an extraordinarily good masters diploma thesis
Link:
Abstract: The aim of the study is to study the relationship between the economic and ethical dimensions of an individual and the society.
The first part of the study summarizes and develops the history of the
dialectics between economic and ethical thought. The first part is focused mainly on the individual level and the propriety of the model of homooeconomicus and suggests a furthering of the model. The second part deals with collective actions on the level of industry and also suggests a model. The historical sketch of the development of the relationship between ethics and economics starts with the enquiry about the Hebrew understanding of the interdependency of ethics and economics. The study then continues through the thinking of antique writers and significant individuals such as David Hume, Adam Smith and closes with Immanuel Kant.
At the end of the firs section a methodological toolbox for dealing with
the topic is suggested. This section utilizes the concepts of Martin
Buber, David Hume, Immanuel Kant and the key findings of institutional
economics. In this part of the paper the model of homo oeconomicus is
extended to include extra-economical considerations (such as family,
society, etc).
The second part of the study is an attempt to practically apply the
findings of the first part on a case study from a market creation in the
transforming Czech Republic. The author uses the recent experiences of trust building and spontaneous rule creation at originally poorly
regulated Czech capital markets. The paper studies the behavior of the
players at this market vis-a-vis the situation of developing institutional
framework, where the players themselves had to define their own de facto rules and strive to regain the lost trust of the general public.
The paper concludes with a brief model of spontaneous collective rule
creation and suggests a possible path of future development.
Downloadable: Diploma Thesis - Sedláček

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