Bültmann & Gerriets
Something for Nothing?
An Explanation and Defence of the Scholastic Position on Usury
von David Hunt
Verlag: Os Justi Press
Reihe: Os Justi Studies in Catholic Tradition Nr. 14
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-1-965303-02-3
Erschienen am 05.09.2024
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 222 mm [H] x 145 mm [B] x 12 mm [T]
Gewicht: 341 Gramm
Umfang: 148 Seiten

Preis: 32,90 €
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Klappentext

Usury is a topic with a long and complex history. While it is typically understood today as the practice of charging excessive interest, this is a far cry from the meaning given to it by ancient and medieval authors, who considered the charging of any interest on a mutuum (a loan of such things as are estimated by weight, number, or measure) to be usury. Finding a thorough, coherent, and believable explanation for so monumental a difference in outlook has been nearly impossible-until now. In this provocative work, David Hunt explains and defends the traditional view that usury is a charge for something that does not exist and is therefore a form of theft. Indeed, usury begets a form of chattel slavery, since charging interest on a mutuum is an attempt to profit by treating the borrower as the lender's property.
Not only does Hunt present and clarify the classic arguments (as seen above all in St. Thomas Aquinas), he also carefully distinguishes usury from morally legitimate ways in which rent and fees may be charged. He shows how modern economists from the late seventeenth century onward misconstrue the issues at hand, leading not so much to the refutation of the old view as to a distortion and neglect of it that persists to this day.
Drawing on a wide range of economists and theologians, Hunt pierces to the heart of the usury debate, thoroughly debunking the claim of John T. Noonan that usury is a "dead issue" to which only to "a few inveterate haters of the present order" pay heed. In reality, a clear grasp of usury is crucial to understanding why many modern Westerners live in a state of financial slavery-and why this was not the inevitable result of "progress" but a direct consequence of subordinating moral reasoning to economic analysis.