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Like it or Not, You're a Capitalist. But Are You a Conscious One?
If you shop, have a job, or own any investments, you're a capitalist. But are you a conscious capitalist?
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Whether a CEO of a multi-billion dollar enterprise like Conscious Capitalist John Mackey (CEO of Whole Foods Markets and a board member of Integral Life) or a stay-at-home dad who does all the grocery shopping, conscious capitalists believe that capitalism can be more than a zero-sum game of winners and losers. If you want to be on the forefront of helping business provide more meaning and goodness to society as well as great value, than here's what sets you apart as a conscious capitalist:
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1. You believe that business has a deeper purpose than just maximizing profits. You recognize that your career calling does, too.
2. You believe that the needs of all the stakeholders in an economic system should be considered, including investors, customers, employees, suppliers, society and the environment. And you recognize that you actually represent each of these in some way.
3. You believe that "capitalism" can and will evolve as the consciousness of the people composing it evolve. So you take your own responsibility to evolve seriously!
Now some of this may seem new. That's because it is.
Operating under the hood of capitalism is a fairly simple assumption: that advocating a free market economy is more productive and more beneficial to society as a whole, because everyone involved is looking after their own self interest. This forces competition, resulting in some degree of fair compromise for the sake of mutual gain. This drive toward competition for mutual benefit has been the engine of progress in the modern Western world, and is famously characterized as Adam Smith's "Invisible Hand", naturally guiding society through wave upon wave of increasing wealth and innovation.
But what if the "invisible hand" weren't so invisible?
Classical economic theory is rarely concerned with what people are thinking or feeling, focusing instead upon more objective metrics like behavior and the exchange of material goods. There's really not much space allotted for interior motivations at all, aside from the core assumption about "mutual self interest". What if we had a keener understanding of what "self interest" really means, uncovering the actual motivating factors behind all of our behaviors?
What if we had the tools to both qualify and quantify the many levels of "self"—acknowledging that our identity grows and changes throughout our lives—as well as the different levels of "interest" that stem from our personal values and cultural worldview?
And what if we could combine these interior dimensions with a much more sophisticated understanding of "mutual benefit", acknowledging how our activity in the marketplace impacts our stakeholders, our community, and our environment?
Ever since Adam Smith first penned The Wealth of Nations in 1776, capitalism has been both lauded and criticized from almost every possible angle. On one end of the spectrum, we can see that the move to capitalist economics has been one of humanity's greatest forces of liberation, catalyzing more progress and pulling more people out of poverty than any other social or economic movement in history. On the other, capitalism is often vilified as an enemy of virtue, an incubator of greed, and a perpetual source of war and environmental devastation.
So who is right? Has our social experiment with capitalism been a blessing or a curse? The answer, not surprisingly, is a resounding "both/and". After all, capitalism is just a tool—and like any tool, it can be used to either better lives or to destroy them altogether.
Listen as Ken and Bert trace the growth of capitalism from Wealth of Nations all the way to Whole Foods, noting some of the ways we can help build a better and more conscious capitalism for today's newly-interconnected global economy. If you are an executive, manager, or business owner, understanding the principles and history of conscious capitalism will not only help expand and deepen your own definition of success, it will help you make better decisions that will benefit more of the world. And even if you aren't in the business world, a coherent vision of conscious capitalism will help you to become a more conscious consumer and bring more care and prudence to your own financial affairs.
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Contributors:
Bert Parlee
Offering leadership and other trainings around the world, Dr Parlee is a licensed clinical psychologist with private psychotherapy and executive/personal life coaching practices in Mill Valley, California. From its inception, Bert has been a vital part of Ken Wilber’s Integral Institute in Colorado, where he also works as a large group trainer and facilitator.
Ken Wilber
Ken Wilber is the most widely translated academic writer in America, with 25 books translated into some 30 foreign languages, and is the first philosopher-psychologist to have his Collected Works published while still alive. Wilber is an internationally acknowledged leader and the preeminent scholar of the Integral stage of human development, which continues to gather momentum around the world. His many books, all of which are still in print, can be found at Amazon.com. Some of his more popular books include Integral Spirituality; No Boundary; Grace and Grit; Sex, Ecology, Spirituality; and the "everything" books: A Brief History of Everything (one of his largest selling books) and A Theory of Everything (probably the shortest introduction to his work). Ken Wilber is the founder of Integral Institute, Inc., the co-founder of Integral Life, Inc., and the Senior Fellow of Integral Life Spiritual Center.
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