Anarrus -> RE: GREED - when is enough enough? (10/15/2009 10:56:16 AM)
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ORIGINAL: einstien5201 quote:
ORIGINAL: Anarrus "The point is, ladies and gentleman, that greed, for lack of a better word, is good. Greed is right, greed works. Greed clarifies, cuts through, and captures the essence of the evolutionary spirit. Greed, in all of its forms; greed for life, for money, for love, knowledge has marked the upward surge of mankind." ....Gordon Gecko in the movie WALL STREET "Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God." Matthew 19:24 Here's the difference. Gordon Gecko is talking about the physical, temporal world. Greed works. Capitalism works because it relies on people acting in thier own-self interest, which we generally do. Communism failed because it was founded on the principle of people doing things that are not in thier own best interest. Jesus was talking about how to enter a spiritual realm. If you'll look, many of the things that He talks about how to live a good Christian life are contrary to what makes sense to have a functioning society. "Turn the other cheek" is very noble and loving, but if society as a whole did it, we'd have murders thieves and rapists running amok because they were never punished. Also, you'll notice that he didn't say "A greedy man", but "A rich man" the difference being quite significant. A rich man will have trouble letting go of his things, especially when to follow Jesus in the early church drew persecution and shunning. Hi einstein, I should have known the quote from Matthew 19:24 would come back to bite me in the ass. I'm not religious nor do I consider myself a Christian yet I used that quote because it was one all of us have heard at one time or another. But, I agree that he didn't say "a greedy man". Yes the difference is significant. I should have used a more relevant quote. Anyway, I have no argument with capitalism as a means to end and I'm not condeming it. Greed is a concept in and of itself . It can and does exist independently of capitalism. Self-interest, as you put it, isn't a bad concept, nor is capitalism in meeting basic needs and even reasonable wants (again reasonable is open to interpretation). However, greed, to me seems an irrational form of self-interest which if unchecked by ethical or moral boundaries has potential to harm as much as benefit. Aesop wrote a very simple fable The Dog and The Bone, illustrating the concept. Too, there is quite a bit of difference between self-interest and selfish-interest. Even Adam Smith (the high priest of capitalism) understood and differentiated between the concepts of beneficial self-interest and selfish-interest (greed), the former being beneficial in a bargaining scenario while the later being deterimental to reaching an agreement. To me Gordon Gecko's philosophy was more one of selfish-interest (greed) then of self-interest. If you saw the film, you know that in the end his greed blinded his ambition and resulted in his downfall. Now it just seems to me that something loosely related occurred on Wall St not too long ago, didn't it?
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