Category: History

  • Value Others When You Are Powerful

    Today’s blog looks back to a classic text in ancient history which is also used in international relations. The message often taken is a brutal one, that the powerless must submit. Another way of looking at is more positive; that you should value others when you are powerful. When Athens Was Powerful Thucydides was an…

  • Development And Sustainability

    The world is a complex place. Countries all have their own histories, and these have intersected in the past creating some positive and other, often more noticeable, negative interactions. These feed into modern discussions. People in richer countries forget that it wasn’t always the way it is now. Sometimes they romanticize poverty in a way…

  • Can Virtuous Capitalism Be Sustained?

    Can virtuous capitalism be sustained? That is one of the questions that motivated James O’Toole and David Vogel in their discussion of the conscious capitalism. They are mostly positive — but being academics they have to have some reservations. New Lanark And The Challenge of Sustaining Virtuous Capitalism The authors discuss Robert Owen. Two hundred…

  • Social Change Will Always Face Setbacks

    It is hard to improve the world even when it should be obvious that the world needs to improve. When things look bad it may be helpful to look at history to observe people fighting injustices that most of us can, thankfully, only imagine. Campaigners in history saw plenty of occasions when it seemed like…

  • Small Differences And Critical Junctures

    Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson wrote “Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty” just over a decade ago. It is a great book. Admittedly they don’t really need my opinion given they were given the Nobel Prize for their work, so I doubt that they were sitting around worrying what I thought about…

  • Do You Really Need A Dodgy Historical Example?

    I initially trained as a historian (my Master of Arts is in Hellenistic Studies — the period just after Alexander the Great). As such, I’m fascinated by appeals to history to justify ideas in modern life. They can often be fun to read about; after all there are some great stories in history. The challenge…

  • A History Of Conservation

    Michelle Nijhuis has written a history of conservation, Beloved Beasts. There are 1) many interesting characters and 2) fascinating ideas concerning species and their preservation. Unfortunately, these two features of the book seemed to conflict to my mind. The stories of the colorful characters’ lives kept getting interrupted by digressions about ideas. Still, none of…

  • Owners Often Care About Beer, Housing, God, And National Identity

    Milton Friedman’s idea that owners of, and managers at, companies should only care about the owner’s wealth is pretty odd when you think about it. Owners have long cared about much more because they are human beings. A book on the Guinness family suggests owners often care about beer, housing, God, and national identity. What…

  • Corporate Social Responsibility

    Managers at firms have a long history of seeing their role as more than just making money for their owners. Indeed, many business owners don’t just see business as only a source of profits. One way of discussing the obligations of firms is to discuss Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). Today I’m looking at a history…

  • Change For The Better

    A new year post about change for the better. Finton O’Toole tells a personal history of Ireland. This starts with his birth in 1958 and goes to the present. He is an excellent writer and there is a lot of interesting information. In this post I’ll just look at the core themes of his country…

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