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Aristotle, Christianity, economics, household, jobs, market, marketplace, oikos, work
**In the next few posts, I am going to spend some time unpacking what I think is a central way of thinking about life counter to the predominant mode of focus: that of Oikonomics instead of Economics. This line of thinking is heavily influenced by “Economics and Education for Human Flourishing: Wendell Berry and the Oikonomic Alternative to Neoliberalism,” by Joseph A. Henderson and David W. Hursch published in Educational Studies Vol. 50 (2014), 167-186.
In countless previous posts, I have unpacked what I think are the dangers of pursuing consumption and accumulation as a way of life. I have detailed the many ways in which, both empirically (what the research says) and anecdotally (what I have seen in my own practice as an educator and living as a human being), the ethics of materialism end in tragic brokenness, ruin, and regret. Having taught in both low socio-economic schools and schools of high affluence, I have seen the same eating disorders, cutting, depression, stress, anxiety, substance abuse, fatherlessness, divorce, and suicide attempts in both worlds. To me, it’s not that we need to turn poor folk into rich folk; what we need is to tell a better story for all folk!
The problem, as I have tried to make clear on this blog, is that the overarching, meta-narrative of our culture is one that funnels individuals, through the promise of happiness (like the Siren’s Song in The Odyssey) towards destruction and death. This is not a new problem; indeed, it is one that, for most of human history, was quite clear: what we consume ultimately and always consumes us.
I want to spend some time in the next few posts digging into this a little further by exploring two different social imaginaries (what Charles Taylor calls the myths, stories, and values that shape our way of seeing and being in the world–our worldview, if you will): The Social Imaginary of Economics vs. The Social Imaginary of Oikonomics. As you can imagine, it will take some time to fully flesh all this out, so I want to give just a brief sketch here, then spend the next few posts unpacking this in greater detail.
But first, some definitions:
By “Economics,” I mean several things: the focus (defined by corporate executives, politicians, financiers, academics, marketing, advertising, etc.) on fiscal growth as represented by the such terms as the “bottom line,” “return on investment,” “cost/benefit analysis,” “corporate profits,” “profit maximization,” “growth,” “productivity,” and, obviously enough, a focus on all things “economic”: economic sustainability, profitability, competition, advantage, development, etc. In short, by “Economic” I mean that which we all mean by “economic”: the overwhelming ideology produced by the marketplace that the production of capital and the accumulation of wealth for the consumption of goods and services influences, guides, and directs every facet both of our public and private spheres. That meta-narrative that gives rise and shape to the choices we make (professionally, personally, relationally, geographically, even spiritually); to the way we spend our time, talents, and treasure; to how we organize our lives (both daily and over the long haul); and, ultimately, to the very identities we shape for ourselves and the deeper meaning we give to what matters (what we mean when we define being “well-off,” for instance).
Economics
By “Oikonomics,” ironically, I am harkening back to the etymological root of “economics,” for, indeed, we get our word “economics” from this Greek word, so that, for a long stretch of history, when people talked about “economics,” what they were really talking about was oikonomics. Oikos, then, is the Greek word for “household” used both by Aristotle (Book 1 of The Politics) and by Jesus (in the story of Zacchaeus, for example. Luke 19:1-10).

Oikonomics
In The Politics, Aristotle distinguishes between two types of financial arrangements: oikonomia and chrematistike: oikonomics is that which produces, maintains, and sustains value for the household and community over the long haul; chrematistike is that which maximizes individual accumulation through the exchange of money in the short run. He says, “The acquisition of goods is of two kinds: one, which is necessary for household management (oikonomics); the other, which depends on exchange (chrematistike), is justly regarded with disapproval, since it arises not from nature but from men’s gaining from each other.”
In other words, for Aristotle, oikonomics leads to health, virtue, and human and communal flourishing; profit maximization leads to the perversion of human and communal flourishing because it shapes persons who can’t see past their own navels. For Aristotle, human and communal flourishing is rooted in space and place; in short, in community. Wealth robs both the individual and others of that community because it centers the pursuer on his/her own gain. Persons who pursue profit merely for profit’s sake, says Aristotle, “are eager for life but not for the good life. These people turn all skills into skills of acquiring goods, as though that were the end and everything had to serve that end.”
Jesus unpacks this as well in the story of Zacchaeus, the “wee little man” who climbs the sycamore tree to get a better glimpse of Jesus. Zacchaeus was the chief tax collector in his community, which meant that, as long as he got what Rome required, he could set the tax rate at whatever he wanted so that he could line his own pockets with the excess. As you can imagine, this would make him one of the most despised persons in his community. As James Orr describes it, “In Judea, under the Roman system, all circumstances combined to make the publican the object of bitter hatred. He represented and exercised in immediate contact, at a sore spot with individuals, the hated power of Rome. The tax itself was looked upon as an inherent religious wrong, as well as civil imposition, and by many the payment of it was considered a sinful act of disloyalty to God. The tax-gatherer, if a Jew, was a renegade in the eyes of his patriotic fellows. He paid a fixed sum for the taxes, and received for himself what he could over and above that amount. This is why ‘publican’ became synonymous with ‘sinner’ and ‘pagan’ in the New Testament.”
In such a system both of civil and religious oppression, stands Zacchaeus, the chief tax collector, whose extravagant wealth has come off the backs of many in that very crowd (his neighbors, his community, and, quite possibly, his own family). And yet, when he encounters Jesus, he says that he will give away half his goods to the very ones he impoverished and to restore four-fold (300 percent) all that he had gained illicitly. And Jesus’ response here is telling: when Zacchaeus denounces his “economic” gain, Jesus proclaims that salvation has now come to Zacchaeus and his “household,” his oikos.
So, as we move through this conversation, it will be important that we think of these two ideas as competing social imaginaries, competing ways of seeing and being in the world, competing ways of shaping values, identity, meaning and purpose. One can serve the values of economics or one can serve the values of oikonomics, but, as we will see, it is very difficult to do both.
Economics is about profit maximization, capital accumulation, and the consumption of goods, services, resources, the environment, other species, other humans, and, eventually, ourselves.
Oikonomics is about communal maximization, relational accumulation, and the healthy stewardship of goods, services, resources, the environment, other species, and other humans that ends in blessing and health for all.
The next post: “The Real Cost of Economic Progress”
Related Posts:
Mmmm I’d… disagree with how you’re characterizing economics, even though I agree with your general conclusion. Economics is just the study of how people make choices. What you’re describing sounds more like the ideologies of capitalism and neoliberalism — which, to be sure, deserve to be criticized. But I think it’s useful to know what it is exactly that you’re proposing we do away with.
Thank you for your response!
As I say in the post, I use the word “economics” as it is understood by those who typically and generally employ it: as a means of measuring a particular way of seeing and being in the world that is rooted in the financial well-being of a person, company, city, state, or nation. For instance, when you hear (name your favorite pundit, politician, or radio talk show host here.) say “economic downturn” or “economic development” he/she is not talking merely about the study of how people make choices (I would argue they are not talking about that at all, but at least we should agree that they are talking about something “more” than that). No, they are talking about indices measured by the marketplace (jobs growth or decline, GDP, stock market, corporate bottom lines, growth or decline of particular sectors within the marketplace–automobiles or clothing, for instance). Economic growth is not measured in the study of how people make choices; it is measured in how many socks they buy (or iPhones, homes, or pizzas). Yes, these are, of course, choices, but, again, they are also more than choices.
And that’s the point, really. It’s about the value we place in the choices we make: what we define as “wealth”. And yes, capitalism and neoliberalism are wrapped up in all this (though, for the sake of a blog audience, that is too much to go into), which is why, again, I chose to use the term “economics” as it is used in general parlance. In other words, when I use the term “economics” I am assuming a particular set of values rooted in a general understanding of terms that have their source in the lingua franca of the marketplace.
All of this to say, what I will propose, over the course of this discussion, will be a social imaginary rooted in consumption, accumulation, and maximized gain made possible by the worldview of “economics” vs a social imaginary rooted in community, relationships, and the good we all share in common made possible by a re-imagined worldview of living from the oikos out. I hope all of this will become more clear as I unpack it in real terms.
Thanks for pushing the conversation into the deeper waters! Keep at it!
“as a means of measuring a particular way of seeing and being in the world that is rooted in the financial well-being of a person, company, city, state, or nation”
That may be how many people think of it, but that’s not necessarily all it is or all it can do. In my environmental econ class, for example, we studied how cost-benefit analysis can be employed in a way that takes into account protection of the environment as a “benefit”. Anything you value can be considered a “benefit”. Money is an economist’s way of measuring things, but that doesn’t mean money is the only thing that matters, even within economics.
“And that’s the point, really. It’s about the value we place in the choices we make”
Right, you’re talking about an ideology. An ideology that is very popular among mainstream economists, but not the defining trait of economics itself, and I think there’s value in making that distinction. Reminds me of how some people say they are “against religion” when what they really mean is that they’re dissatisfied with specific religions/religious tenets/religious people, not the entire concept of religion itself.
“And yes, capitalism and neoliberalism are wrapped up in all this (though, for the sake of a blog audience, that is too much to go into)”
Oh I bet a blog audience could handle it.
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> “Wealth robs both the individual and others of that community because it centers the pursuer on his/her own gain.” > > How so? I could understand if you said “the love of wealth” or “the idolatrous, covetous pursuit of wealth” …but wealth itself? > > http://biblehub.com/proverbs/10-22.htm > > Looking forward to more discussion of the oikos! Thanks for using your gifts, bro! >
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Great question!! By “wealth” I mean, of course, the wealth acquired through financial gain (as opposed to other forms of wealth: relational, emotional, communal, spiritual, etc.). That verse is telling, but Jesus seems to point to a different fundamental reality: that it is very difficult to acquire financial wealth and the Kingdom (the whole “camel through the eye of the needle” thing). In fact, as many scholars point out, Jesus talks about greed and the problems associated with wealth way more than sex and hell combined. What I will argue through this discussion is that it is very hard to not let wealth (both in its acquisition and in its possession) not become the dominant “god” of one’s life. When Jesus said you cannot serve both God and Mammon, he meant it. I also think he meant that, if one serves Mammon, that god too says, “Thou shalt have no other gods before me.” As the research shows (and I just pointed out a bit of it), pursuing wealth shapes us into certain kinds of people, people who come to worship Mammon in ways that are very destructive to themselves, others, and the greater community. It may be a chicken/egg thing: how does one have wealth without first the pursuit of it (winning the lottery and inheritance are, of course, the two main answers, but, in the first case, the research shows that lottery winners end up much worse off than before they won their money, and those who inherit wealth without having to sacrifice and toil for it also don’t fare as well as those who passed it down to them). Therefore, we are left in a conundrum: to have wealth, one must pursue it. To pursue economic wealth is to, typically, not pursue oikonomic wealth (something I have yet to discuss). It is very hard to do both (I’m not saying it cannot be done, I’m just saying it’s really hard).
Thanks, again, for the provocation of dialogue!