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Dear Ms.Dugan:
Towards the end of your message you wrote:"Millenium is a long
time.What about Thomas Aquinas ?HE STARTED TO SPEAK
ABOUT PROFIT IN A MORE POSITIVE WAY".
Your statement has merit only if you ignore other civilizations (in
particular medieval Islamic civilizations). Some of us engaged in
what we have called the Schumpeterian Great Gap thesis debate
have tried to argue against the Eurocentrism of the Schumpeterian
Gap thesis; we have demonstrated that various Arab, Persian and
other Muslim thinkers wrote and discussed many issues we now
discuss in economics before Aquinas. Muslim scholars,who
inherited Greek and Iranian (i.e., Persian) thought ,and Islamic
ethos, viewed economics ,and thus profits very positively and
discussed many economic concepts discussed in Europe later on.
These scholars, many of whose writings were translated to Latin,
influenced Aquinas and others in economics.
In a HOPE paper (1998) I even traced Adam Smith's division of
labor to these scholars (including Smith's celebrated pin factory
example).In fact,it was the writings of Islamic cholars( Ghazali,Ibn
Sina,Ibn Rushd,etc.) that introduced Aquinas to Aristotle.
Remember that before the call to Islam, Mohammad and his
companion engaged in trade extensivelyand as some have argued,
"The Meccan milieu of Mohammad his followers was a business
milieu." Historian S.D.Goitein has discussed the emergence of a
bourgeoisie in early Islamic history which lasted for several
centuries. For the economic content of the medieval Islamic
scholars you can see the works of Essis, Ghazanfar, Hosseini
and others (in HOPE and elsewhere ).
Sincerely,
Hamid Hosseini
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