The Moral Purpose of Doing Business
Doing business requires mutual respect and mutual recognition of our shared human dignity. It is, therefore, a moral calling.
Doing business requires mutual respect and mutual recognition of our shared human dignity. It is, therefore, a moral calling.
One does not fulfill one’s potential by listening to Scheherazade in a gilded hall, or by reading the Odyssey in one’s den. One does so by setting forth into the vast unknown.
If one upholds one’s inner goodness, reflects on one’s actions, and rejects the CCP—the representative of the greatest evil, one will be protected by the divine.
Next time you are doing your job and have an opportunity to serve a client or colleague, recognize that you are benefiting their standard of living and be thankful for the opportunity to add value to someone else’s life.
Frederic Bastiat famously distinguished good and bad economists by their ability (and inability, respectively) to see the “unseen.”
As Henry Ford famously said, if the people understood how the banking system worked, there would be a revolution before tomorrow morning.