Description Thomas Piketty's Capital in the Twenty-First Century initiated a great debate not just about inequality but also regarding the failures found in the economic models used by theoreticians and practitioners alike.
Wealth of Persons offers a totally different perspective that challenges the very terms of the debate.
The Great Recession reveals a great existential rift at the core of certain economic reflections, thereby showing the real crisis of the crisis of economics.
In the human sciences we have created a kind of Tower of Babel where we cannot understand each other any longer.
The breakdowns occur equally on the personal, social, political, and economic levels.
There is a need for an about-face in method to restore harmony among dissociated disciplines.
Wealth of Persons offers a key to such a restoration, applying insights and analysis taken from different economic scholars, schools of thought, philosophical traditions, various disciplines, and charismatic entrepreneurs.
Wealth of Persons aims at recapturing an adequate understanding of the acting human person in the economic drama, one that measures up to the reality.
The investigation is a passport allowing entry into the land of economic knowledge, properly unfolding the anthropological meaning of the free economy.
John Mc Nerney's Wealth of Persons is an amazing tour de force--his focus on the human person in economics not only opens up economics for the nonprofessional economist, it's a bracing exposition of the philosophy of the human person, all the more impressive when seen immersed in economic action.
By focusing on the Austrian and the later Bologna schools' insistence on the role of the entrepreneur he critiques, on the one hand, an economy overfocused on profit and, on the other, Marx's (and later Piketty's) misreading of economics as a struggle between capital and labor.
It should be required reading for all students (and teachers) of economics as well as of applied philosophical ant.