Overview This book is a philosophical reflection (using mainly Hegel, in
addition to 1 Adam Smith, Kant, Marx and Catholic Social Thought) about
the soc- political dimension of economics. In it I both agree and
disagree with the slogan that "the least government is the best
government. " I agree with the slogan, in particular as it applies to
the economic domain. Adam Smith taught us that rational and
self-interested individuals, left by themselves, create a more efficient
and reliable economic system than one in which the government has a
heavy role as was the case in his time with the merc- tile system
(Smith, 14, 651). Ludwig von Mises demonstrated the same idea for the
communist command economy (Hayek 1935, 87-130). I d- agree with the
above mentioned slogan if it is interpreted as suggesting that we can
best forget about the role of the government for a good functioning
economy. Instead, I will argue that the government has an important fu-
tion in creating the proper regulations and the wise institutional
arran- ments which will allow the economy to flourish in a more
efficient, fair and humane way. This book is interdisciplinary in
nature. It is a philosophical and ethical reflection on economics.
Hence, I make use of philosophical ideas, often but not exclusively
those of Hegel. I reflect philosophically on economic concepts.