Can Christians be capitalists?

NOVEMBER 18, 2011
By Zachary Treu ’13, Contributing Writer

On a chilly Thursday night, Jay Richards addressed a crowd of about 50 in the Conservative Students for a Better Tomorrow Cultural Life Program “Can Christians Be Capitalists?”

Richards, a theologian and Senior Fellow of the Discovery Institute in Seattle, sought to prove to his audience that the principles of capitalism and of Christianity do not contradict but rather complement each other.

Richards’s talk, held in Johns Hall, was calmly and attentively received. He began with an explanation of his development as a Christian capitalist, and then listed and discussed four “economic myths” from his 2009 book Money, Greed, and God, which, he informed his listeners, had been submitted prior to the debt crisis.

The first was the “piety myth,” which leads to the “ignoring [of] unintended consequences and trade-offs.” The most important question any economist can ask, Richards declared, is, “And then what will happen?” The action taken must be considered along with the reasons for the action, Richards said. “Both matter to God.”

He brought up the Child Labor Deterrence Act of the 1990s, which required American-style child labor laws in America’s trade partners. “What happens when you impose child labor laws in a country with less development? What happens?” he asked the audience. “If they’re working in what we think of as sweatshops, it’s probably out of economic necessity.” Richards then cited studies showing that children who left their manufacturing jobs would sometimes turn to prostitution, eliciting quiet gasps from the crowd.

The second economic myth was the belief that the essence of capitalism was greed, which Richards described as the “most pernicious.” In his response to this idea, he rejected the opinions of Wall Street character Gordon Gekko and of philosopher Ayn Rand, instead offering a brief close reading of Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations, which described the “invisible hand” of capitalism as guiding business “in spite of avarice.”

Richards supports self-interest as the basis of capitalism, rather than greed: “There’s a domain of rational self-interest that is morally good,” he said. “It is a part of our creative nature. That self-interest will be channeled in a way beneficial to others.

“Even if people are fallen and sinful and greedy and selfish, in a free economy, they can’t steal their neighbor’s money. They must produce something their neighbors will want to buy.”

The third economic myth was that of the zero-sum game, the idea that for one person to gain wealth, another must lose it. “By definition, a free trade, if it’s really a free trade, is win-win,” Richards said.

Related was the fourth myth, of materialism: the belief that wealth isn’t created but merely transferred. Richards invoked the concept of imago dei – that man was created in the image of God – to challenge this myth. “God freely creates the world. He creates things that weren’t there before,” Richards explained. Thus, “We are free creators ourselves. . . . He creates the sand, but gives us the liberty to transform it.”

After wrapping up his lecture, Richards answered a few questions, during which he further emphasized his belief in the capitalistic messages of the Bible. “In the book of Acts, people are voluntarily selling and sharing their stuff,” he explained to one inquisitor. “Peter explicitly articulates the principle of private property,” he said to another. Capitalism is not grab-all-you-can, he clarified, but “competition according to very specific rules.”

Richards dismissed his audience with one final commendation of capitalism: “Free market is the best of all viable alternatives,” he said. “No other economic system can lift entire cultures out of poverty.”

Is global capitalism the solution to world poverty?

NOVEMBER 17, 2011
By Summer Woods ’14, Contributing Writer

What if there were a country with a government that placed no limits on industry?

Andrew Bernstein, a philosopher and author, asked this question during a Cultural Life Program event Wednesday night as he argued for capitalism as a solution for the end of global poverty. The event was sponsored by Conservative Students for a Better Tomorrow.

Bernstein, a visiting professor of philosophy at Marist College, earned his Ph.D. from the Graduate School of the City University of New York. His most recent book is Capitalism Unbound: The Incontestable Moral Case for Individual Rights.

His speech focused on economics from a moral point of view and, as he put it, “I’m only a philosopher, not an economist. But I can read.”

In his discussion, Bernstein sought to give a proper understanding of capitalism and to explain the benefits that flow from the economic system. He said the fundamental nature of capitalism is “the respect for the rights and freedom of an individual, which allows them to live by their own rational judgment in their own life. . . . It provides a rule of law that protects private property.”

He cited the historical success of capitalism and its origins in Western Europe with the great intellectuals of the Enlightenment, such as Isaac Newton and John Locke. Bernstein stressed that these great thinkers were common men whose ideas were only able to flourish in a society with political and religious freedoms. Using this example, Bernstein said capitalism fuels scientific and technological development and better living standards.

“As Americans, we are proudly the fattest people in history. But the problems associated with that pale in comparison to a parent watching their 3-year-old die of starvation. And famine is the greatest consequence of not being a capitalist country.”

He said the only way to end global poverty is to raise real wages, which can be done only after the amount of consumer goods has been increased in relation to their demand. He believes that the only way to increase consumer goods is to “glorify the human mind” through capitalism.

To end poverty, he said, individuals must be given rights through political and social freedoms so that economic growth can occur.

“If your life belongs to you, then ipso facto your mind belongs to you.  The mind is the means by which man creates all things valuable to human life. And the mind requires capitalist freedom.”

Bernard Osher Foundation of San Francisco awards $1 million to OLLI @ Furman

Furman alum and former U.S. Secretary of Education was on hand for the announcement

NOVEMBER 17, 2011
by Vince Moore, Media Relations Director

GREENVILLE, S.C.—The Bernard Osher Foundation of San Francisco has awarded the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI) at Furman University a $1 million grant in support of the rapidly growing continuing education program.

According to Lucy Woodhouse, director of OLLI @ Furman, the grant will fund an endowment to support the growing OLLI membership and provide opportunities for more program outreach into senior communities throughout the Upstate.

The Institute offers more than 300 courses and events a year to its nearly 1,200 members.  It will also soon have a new home on campus, the 22,000-square-foot Herring Center for Continuing Education.

In making the announcement to a group of OLLI members Thursday, Richard Riley, chair of Furman’s Board of Trustees, read from a letter written by Osher Foundation president Mary Bitterman.

“We applaud your vibrant learning community which reflects your contributions and time, talent and financial resources that your members have made to develop and maintain an outstanding, yet affordable program,” Bitterman wrote.  “Your successful fund raising for the construction of your new home in the Herring Center is a particularly inspiring achievement, and we commend you on setting a very high standard for others in the national network of Osher Institutes.”

Woodhouse said this is the second $1 million gift that the Osher Foundation has given in support of OLLI @ Furman.  The former Furman University Learning in Retirement program was renamed the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at Furman in 2008 after it received the first series of grants from the Osher Foundation.

OLLI @ Furman is a member-led, member-run, diverse learning community of senior adults engaged in non-credit educational courses and programs, social opportunities and physical activities that inspire students to stay mentally and physically active in a supportive university environment. Membership and courses are affordable, and scholarships are available.

The Bernard Osher Foundation was founded in 1977 by Bernard Osher, a respected businessman and community leader. The Foundation seeks to improve quality of life through support for higher education and the arts. The Foundation supports 119 Lifelong Learning Institutes across the country.

For more information, contact Lucy Woodhouse at 864-294-2997 or lucy.woodhouse@furman.edu, or visit the OLLI @Furman website.

Medical school can wait for William Middleton

The plan was going ahead full-steam for former Paladin football player Will Middleton. He graduated from Furman in four years, then spent his fifth playing football and preparing for the MCATs and internships so he could go to medical school.  Then the NFL arrived in his life.  The Florida Times-Union reported on Middleton, who, after a few up-and-down years in the NFL, is now starting at right corner for the Jacksonville Jaguars.

Read the article

Furman listed among “Best Values” in Kiplinger’s

Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine has named Furman as one of the “Best Values in Private Universities and Liberal Arts Colleges” for 2011-2012.

Furman is ranked No. 52 in the liberal arts college category.  The magazine lists the top 100 schools in each of the private university and liberal arts college categories.

According to Kiplinger’s, “the 2011-12 rankings for best values in private colleges and universities identify institutions that are both academically strong and affordable — our definition of value.”

The rankings are included in the December 2011 issue of the magazine.

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Annapolis Group study shows high satisfaction among liberal arts graduates

NOVEMBER 16, 2011
by Vince Moore, Media Relations Director

A new national study commissioned by the Annapolis Group, a consortium of America’s leading liberal arts colleges, has found that graduates of residential liberal arts colleges give their college experience higher marks than do graduates of private or public universities.

Those high marks came in the areas of getting a first job out of college, gaining admission to graduate school, and generally preparing to meet life’s challenges.

Conducted by higher education consulting firm Hardwick Day, the study is based on a total of 2,700 telephone interviews made in 2002 and again in the summer of 2011. It is one of only a few studies that explore the lasting effects of college in such areas as career preparation and advancement, skill development, development of personal and professional values and attitude, and community involvement.

Furman is a member of the Annapolis Group, a non-profit alliance of 130 residential liberal arts colleges. Member schools commissioned the survey to determine how its graduates perceive the effectiveness of its member institutions in comparison to others.

Read more at the Annapolis Group website

A beautiful discussion

The Morning News team at WRAL-TV in Raleigh, N.C., got into an interesting debate about the most beautiful college campuses in America.  Several folks at the station nominated their alma maters, including executive producer Scott Nagel, who graduated from Furman in 1990.  Doesn’t the executive producer have the final say?

Check out the discussion on the WRAL blog

Philosophy professor Simmons publishes new book about God, ethics and politics

Dr. Aaron Simmons

NOVEMBER 8, 2011
by Tina Underwood, Media Relations

GREENVILLE, S.C. —J. Aaron Simmons, an assistant professor of philosophy at Furman University, has written a new book about God, ethics and politics.

In God and the Other: Ethics and Politics after the Theological Turn, Simmons proposes a model of postmodern religious belief and ethical existence. The book is published by Indiana University Press.

In his book, Simmons builds on the work of such postmodern philosophers as Søren Kierkegaard, Emmanuel Levinas, Jean-Luc Marion and Jacques Derrida, among others, and suggests how Continental philosophy of religion can intersect with political philosophy, environmental philosophy and theories of knowledge.

Jeffrey Dudiak of Kings University College in Edmonton says that Simmons “combines solid research with thoughtful consideration of the issues” and calls the book “informative, challenging and provocative.”

Simmons joined the Furman faculty in 2011. A graduate of Lee University, he holds M.A. degrees from Florida State University and Vanderbilt University, and a Ph.D. from Vanderbilt.  He has also taught at Vanderbilt, The University of the South and Hendrix College, and is co-editor of Levinas and Kierkegaard: Ethics, Politics, and Religion, published by Indiana University Press in 2008.

For more information about God and the Other, go to http://www.iupress.indiana.edu/ or contact Simmons in the philosophy department at 864-294-3526 or aaron.simmons@furman.edu.

Alum Stephen O’Day joins Southern Environmental Law Center

Stephen O'Day

The Southern Environmental Law Center has announced that Stephen O’Day, a 1976 Furman graduate, has been named chairman of the organization’s Board of Trustees.  O’Day, who majored in political science at Furman and earned his J.D. degree from Harvard Law School, is partner and head of the Environmental and Sustainability practices at Smith, Gambrell & Russell, LLP, in Atlanta.

The Southern Environmental Law Center, which is celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, is a nonprofit, non-partisan organization that uses the power of the law to protect the environment of the Southeast.  There have only been three previous board chairs in the organization’s history.

Read more

10 things to know about the Paladins

The Furman football team is traveling to Gainesville this weekend to take on the Florida Gators. It will be the ninth overall meeting between the schools and the first since 1990. The Gators have won the last six in the series and own the edge over Furman 6-2.  But Furman has had its share of success against FBS schools in the past, and the Bleacher Report provides its readers with a list of 10 things to know about the Paladins.

Read the Bleacher Report

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