Human beings have sought to amass wealth but they've also condemned it as a source of human corruption. Social science, theology, and philosophy have long been home to intense debates about the implications of wealth for happiness, virtue, justice, and democracy. Artists and writers, too, have critically explored the relationship between money and humanity.
In a new series of talks, seminars, readings, films and performances, the McCoy Family Center for Ethics in Society, along with several campus partners will explore the ethical questions at the heart of wealth. What is the relationship between financial success and a flourishing human life? Does wealth make people happy? Is inheritance legitimate? Is large wealth inequality fair? Are large wealth inequalities damaging to a democracy? What are the moral obligations of the wealthy to those in need?
More details to be posted as they become available. All Ethics of Wealth events are open to the public.
October 2 / 7:00pm / Tresidder Memorial Union, Oak West New Date OCTOBER 2 (Rescheduled from Oct 3)
"Wealth in the Gilded Age: How Much is Enough?"
Gavin Jones (English, Stanford) & Richard White (History, Stanford)
October 17 / 5:15pm / Levinthal Hall, Stanford Humanities Center
"Spiritual Capitalism: The Prosperity Gospel of Oprah Winfrey"
Kathryn Lofton (Religious Studies, Yale)
co-sponsored with the Department of Religious Studies and the Ho Center for Buddhist Studies
October 28 / 10:00am / Memorial Church
“Money and Meaning”
Rev. Canon Rosa Lee Harden (Cathedral of All Souls, Asheville, North Carolina / Co-Founder & Producer, Social Capital Markets)
co-sponsored with the Office for Religious Life
November 1 / 7:00pm / CEMEX Auditorium (we will start promptly at 7:00pm)
"Love & Taxes"
Josh Kornbluth (Monologist)
Faculty talk back after the performance with Joe Bankman (Stanford Law) and Barbara Fried (Stanford Law).
Tickets are free but you must reserve a seat via the Stanford Ticket Office.
November 15 / 7:00pm / Annenberg Auditorium
“Economic Equity: Challenges in a Diverse Society”
Roger Clay (President, Insight Center for Community Economic Development)
January 24 / 5:30pm / location TBA
"Income Inequality: Evidence and Policy Implications"
Emmanuel Saez (Economics, Berkeley)
February 28 / 5:30pm/ CEMEX Auditorium
"Poverty In The Context Of Plenty: Life, Death And Hope In A Mumbai Undercity"
Katherine Boo (Author)
March 7 / 5:15pm / Levinthal Hall, Stanford Humanities Center
“Wealth Admired; Wealth Hated: Managing Money and Power in Fifteenth-Century Basel”
Laura Stokes (History, Stanford)
co-sponsored with the Department of Religious Studies and the Ho Center for Buddhist Studies, the Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, and the Stanford Humanities Center
March 14 / 7:00pm / location TBA
Title TBA
John Taylor (Economics, Stanford)
April 4 / 5:30pm / location TBA
"Free Market Fairness"
John Tomasi (Political Science, Brown University)
April 18 (panel) / 5:30pm tentative time / location TBA
"Contemporary Art in the Museum and the Marketplace"
Julia Bryan-Wilson (Modern and Contemporary Art, UC Berkeley)
Amy Cappellazzo (Chairman, Post-War and Contemporary Development at Christie's)
Scott Rothkopf (Curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art)
Richard Meyer, moderator (Art and Art History, Stanford)
co-sponsored with the Art & Art History Department, the Cantor Art Musuem, and SiCa
April 25-27 (play) 8:00pm, tentative time / The Nitery
"The Exception and the Rule"
directed by Rush Rehm
Tickets are free but you must reserve a seat via the Stanford Ticket Office. Tickets will be available closer to the date of the performance. Thursday, Friday and Saturday night performances.
May 2 / 6:00pm / Levinthal Hall, Stanford Humanities Center
“Buddha and the Green Goo: How Much Is Too Much?”
David Loy (Independent Scholar)
co-sponsored with the Department of Religious Studies, the Ho Center for Buddhist Studies, and the Humanities Center
May 16 / 5:30pm / location TBA
"Where is inequality headed?"
Tony Atkinson (Economics, Oxford)
May 22 / 12:00pm / location TBA
"Justice, Wealth, Taxes: A View from the Perspective of Rabbinic Judaism"
Aryeh Cohen (Rabbinic Literature, American Jewish University)
co-sponsored with the Taube Center for Jewish Studies and the Department of Religious Studies
Series Co-Sponsors
The participating/sponsoring units include: