Is economic development the best hope for the world's poor? A great many
individuals, governments and organizations think the obvious answer is
'Yes', the only issue being about how development can best be achieved.
In recent decades some powerful voices from economics and anthropology
have taken issue with this widespread consensus, and this book aims to
add a philosophical dimension to the debate. Just who are 'the poor',
and what should they hope for? Is the best hope of having a worthwhile
life any different for the poor than it is for the rich?
Drawing on Aristotle, Bacon, Hume, Reid, Marx and Nietzsche, as well as
contemporary authors such as Amartya Sen, Martha Nussbaum and Tim
Ingold, Gordon Graham argues in favour of replacing quantitative
assessments of wealth and poverty with a qualitative account of the ways
in which human lives can be enriched or impoverished. The final chapter
explores the connection between economic and political development and
religious ways of thinking.