This study explores the relationship between the prevailing concept of "just profit" and contemporary reactions to the Sixteenth-Century Price Revolution by tracing the evolving meaning of "profit" in religious, political, and social discourse. Using the period's own macrocosmic-microcosmic analogy, the book examines family correspondence, wills, and court cases in addition to formal tracts to move outward from issues of spiritual profit to family values, employment relationships, and church and state. While England's experience provides a focal point, extensive use of continental sources reveals the problem's broader context. This study should prove particularly useful to those wishing to knit together the now particularized and separated strands of early modern economic, political, social, and religious history.
Author(s): Andrea Finkelstein
Series: Brill's Studies in Intellectual History, 138
Publisher: Brill
Year: 2006
Language: English
Pages: 384
City: Leiden
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Chapter One. PROFIT AND THE PRICE REVOLUTION
Chapter Two. BODY, MIND, AND SOUL
Chapter Three. FAMILY VALUES
Chapter Four. MASTER AND SERVANT
Chapter Five. THE BODY OF PROFIT
Chapter Six. PROFIT AND DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE I: THE SINS OF THE BODY
Chapter Seven. PROFIT AND DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE II: THE SINS OF THE MONARCH
Chapter Eight. PROFIT AND COMMUTATIVE JUSTICE
Chapter Nine. THE MODERN PROBLEM OF PROFIT: A PARADOX BY WAY OF A DIGRESSION
Chapter Ten. CONCLUSION: THE GRAMMAR OF PROFIT IN AN AGE OF REVOLUTIONS
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX