Lecture Description
With so much focus on the developing world, it is easy to dismiss the “secular vs. sacred” worldview struggle of the developed world as just another "first world problem". The purpose of this series is to give needed theoretical and practical attention to the far ranging economic, social and political causes and impacts of the West’s identity crisis. The first two weeks will focus on the deeper trends underlying much of the developed world’s present-day crisis. The latter two weeks will illustrate how these play out in the faltering of the European social model as well as the debt and deficit crisis that presently confronts the West.
Lecturer
Dr. Samuel Gregg is Research Director at Acton Institute. He has written and spoken extensively on questions of political economy, economic history, ethics in finance, and natural law theory. He has an MA in political philosophy from the University of Melbourne, and a Doctor of Philosophy degree in moral philosophy from the University of Oxford, which he attended as a Commonwealth Scholar. He is the author of several books, including On Ordered Liberty, The Commercial Society, The Modern Papacy, Wilhelm Rapke’s Political Economy, as well as many monographs.