000 | 01642aam a2200181 4500 | ||
---|---|---|---|
008 | 170603b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
020 | _a9780415737357 | ||
082 |
_a174.4 _bBRE |
||
100 |
_aBrennan, Jason _913934 |
||
245 | _aMarkets Without Limits: Moral Virtues and Commercial Interests | ||
260 |
_bRoutledge _c2016 _aNew York |
||
300 | _a239p | ||
500 | _aPart I: Should Everything Be for Sale? 1. Are There Some Things Money Should Not Buy? 2. If You May Do It For Free, You May Do It For Money 3. What the Debate Is and Is Not About 4. It’s the How, Not the What Part II: Do Markets Signal Disrespect? 5. Semiotic Objections 6. The Mere Commodity Objection 7. The Wrong Signal and Wrong Currency Objections 8. Objections: Semiotic Essentialism and Minding Our Manners Part III: Do Markets Corrupt? 9. The Corruption Objection 10. How to Make a Sound Corruption Objection 11. The Selfishness Objection 12. The Crowding Out Objection 13. The Immoral Preference Objection 14. The Low Quality Objection 15. The Civics Objection Part IV: Exploitation, Harm to Self, and Misallocation 16. Essential and Incidental Objections 17. Line Up For Expensive Equality! 18. Baby Buying 19. Vote Selling Part V: Debunking Intuitions 20. Anti-Market Attitudes Are Resilient 21. Where Do Anti-Market Attitudes Come From? 22. The Pseudo-Morality of Disgust 23. Postscripto | ||
600 |
_aValue - Philosophy _913935 |
||
600 |
_aEconomics - Moral and Ethical Aspects _913936 |
||
700 |
_aJaworski, Peter M. _913937 |
||
942 |
_2ddc _cLB _k174.4 _mBRE |
||
999 |
_c106554 _d106554 |