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POLS305 The Good Society and the Market (Advanced)

Options for giving political expression to the good and satisfying demands through the market. How humane ideals, political prudence and economics are necessary to create a just world.

This paper examines thinkers from Plato, Marx and Mill to the present to trace the transition from giving political expression to the good life toward satisfying demands. The developments it analyses are the degeneration of moral philosophy and the rise of the market economy. We single out Tawney as a thinker who saw the need to tame the market rather than abolish it. The moral: thinkers who cannot argue economics cannot face the greatest challenge of the modern world - namely, how to humanise market capitalism.

Paper title The Good Society and the Market (Advanced)
Paper code POLS305
Subject Politics
EFTS 0.15
Points 18 points
Teaching period Not offered in 2021 (On campus)
Domestic Tuition Fees (NZD) $913.95
International Tuition Fees (NZD) $4,073.40

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Prerequisite
18 200-level POLS points
Restriction
POLS 205
Schedule C
Arts and Music
Notes
May not be credited together with POLS233 passed in 2010-2017.
Eligibility
An interest in national and international affairs is an advantage.
Contact
politics@otago.ac.nz
Teaching staff

Teaching staff to be advised

Paper Structure
Two thirds of the assessment will be based on the final exam; one third will be based on a research essay.
Textbooks

Textbooks to be advised

Graduate Attributes Emphasised
Lifelong learning, Critical thinking, Cultural understanding, Ethics, Environmental literacy.
View more information about Otago's graduate attributes.
Learning Outcomes

Students who successfully complete this paper should acquire

  • Knowledge of what humane ideals imply about perfecting society
  • A basic grasp of the market economics needed to evaluate how the economy must be "regulated" to humanise it
  • Specialist knowledge about certain great thinkers and the challenges of the present - for example, climate change

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Timetable

Not offered in 2021

Location
Dunedin
Teaching method
This paper is taught On Campus
Learning management system
Blackboard

Options for giving political expression to the good and satisfying demands through the market. How humane ideals, political prudence and economics are necessary to create a just world.

This paper examines thinkers from Plato, Marx and Mill to the present to trace the transition from giving political expression to the good life toward satisfying demands. The developments it analyses are the degeneration of moral philosophy and the rise of the market economy. We single out Tawney as a thinker who saw the need to tame the market rather than abolish it. The moral: thinkers who cannot argue economics cannot face the greatest challenge of the modern world - namely, how to humanise market capitalism.

Paper title The Good Society and the Market (Advanced)
Paper code POLS305
Subject Politics
EFTS 0.15
Points 18 points
Teaching period Not offered in 2022 (On campus)
Domestic Tuition Fees Tuition Fees for 2022 have not yet been set
International Tuition Fees Tuition Fees for international students are elsewhere on this website.

^ Top of page

Prerequisite
18 200-level POLS points
Restriction
POLS 205
Schedule C
Arts and Music
Notes
May not be credited together with POLS233 passed in 2010-2017.
Eligibility
An interest in national and international affairs is an advantage.
Contact
politics@otago.ac.nz
Teaching staff

Teaching staff to be advised

Textbooks

Textbooks to be advised

Graduate Attributes Emphasised
Lifelong learning, Critical thinking, Cultural understanding, Ethics, Environmental literacy.
View more information about Otago's graduate attributes.
Learning Outcomes

Students who successfully complete this paper should acquire

  • Knowledge of what humane ideals imply about perfecting society
  • A basic grasp of the market economics needed to evaluate how the economy must be "regulated" to humanise it
  • Specialist knowledge about certain great thinkers and the challenges of the present - for example, climate change

^ Top of page

Timetable

Not offered in 2022

Location
Dunedin
Teaching method
This paper is taught On Campus
Learning management system
Blackboard