Person: an economic agent for the electronic age
Abstract
Purpose
To demonstrate that person and the philosophy of personalism are more relevant to contemporary economic affairs than individual and the philosophy of individualism.
Design/methodology/approach
This paper addresses two tasks. First, it provides a sketch of what it means to approach economic affairs from the perspective of person and personalism versus individual and individualism. Second, it traces the origins of personalist economics to Aristotle, Aquinas, and Smith, shows why personalist economics departs from mainstream economics, and how it is linked to Weber and Walras principally through Schumpeter.
Findings
This paper provides a schematic showing that personalist economics originates with Aristotle, Aquinas, and Smith without embracing the individualism of the Enlightenment and a timeline that connects the three stages of human communication – oral/aural, script, and electronic – to the evolution of economics since the Enlightenment.
Research limitations/implications
This paper challenges mainstream economics to consider the adequacy of individual/individualism in an age where it is self‐evident that human beings are not autonomous individuals.
Practical implications
The individual as the basic unit of economic analysis is a creature born of the individualism of the script stage. The person as the basic unit of economic analysis was born of the personalism of the electronic stage and, therefore, is much better suited to economic analysis in an age of economic globalization.
Originality/value
The integration of work on human communication with the way in which economists should be thinking about contemporary economic affairs.
Keywords
Citation
O'Boyle, E.J. (2007), "Person: an economic agent for the electronic age", International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 34 No. 7, pp. 472-484. https://doi.org/10.1108/03068290710760245
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited