Our addiction to money is a national malaise, more prevalent than heroin or cigarette addiction. Not only does this addiction impoverish our lives, but it has brought us to the national economic crisis we face today. This book shows how to kick wealth addiction, not through denying ourselves but through a process of joyous self-fulfillment both individually and as a nation.
Philip Slater was an author, actor, playwright, and sociologist. He taught sociology at Harvard, Brandeis, and the University of California at Santa Cruz. He obtained a doctorate from Harvard.
Slater had unique insight into how psychology, sociology, and systemic forces influence, alter, and reinforce each other. His writing style is logical, approachable, and clear, which some misread as simplistic. Slater notoriously eschewed academic peacocking, hence those of us not versed in the jargon of sociologists get the benefit of his discernment.
Wealth Addiction is fairly repetitive, but it's still worth reading every word. Despite being written in 1980, it describes the fundamental sickness that has driven and shaped America since its birth. It's for those who sense a wrongness in our social incentives, and also those who think everything's hunky-dory. This book provides the evidence to see American culture clearly through a different lens than we get from parents, neighbors, teachers, politicians, and the media.
In 2019, I read this book, published in 80s . It is still extremely relevant, ready to apprehend, and immensely validating, for those of us who are not of the Cult of Mammon.