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Greed, Inc.: Why Corporations Rule Our World

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A critical indictment of modern corporate practices argues that today's publicly traded companies enjoy the legal statuses of individuals but are not bound by the same legal and moral responsibilities, in a historical survey that traces the contributions and unethical activities of such companies as Enron, Exxon, and Pfizer. 15,000 first printing.

288 pages, Hardcover

First published March 12, 2005

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About the author

Wade Rowland

16 books2 followers
Wade Rowland is the author of more than a dozen books, including Galileo's Mistake, Spirit of the Web, and Ockham's Razor. He is a former holder of the Maclean Hunter Chair of Ethics in Communications at Ryerson University in Toronto and currently lectures in the social history of communications technologies at Trent University in Peterborough. He lives near Port Hope, Ontario, with his wife, Christine.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Ken Smith.
26 reviews13 followers
December 4, 2014
I mainly agree with the author that corporations are an invented technology that needs to be rethought or restricted in order to avoid destructive side effects resulting from the only goal being maximum profit.

I also thought the idea was interesting that universal social welfare measures were enacted after World War II because they benefited corporations which were provided with "a strong, healthy, and well-educated workforce that was willing to take risks in employment and was ready and able to be retrained in periods of joblessness." But now that that need has been filled, businesses are less interested and those programs are being cut back.

However, I have an issue with his claim that our morality springs from something magical and unexplainable inside ourselves while often mentioning Christianity. I think we should be talking about ethics, not morality. I also think that our ethics can be derived from our naturally evolved empathy along with a desire to live safe, constructive, and more efficient lives in social groups.

He also attacks rationalism as an outdated idea on which corporations are designed. But that's only because he doesn't take reason far enough and tries to mix it with religion.

Humanity has only been remotely reasonable for a very short time in the grand scheme of things. We're still evolving, learning, and improving.
Profile Image for Flip Niesten.
4 reviews
October 17, 2023
During reading the first chapters I got the impression mr Rowland gave a biased description of the Enlichtment thinkers. There is certainly justified critism possible against the thinkers because they expected to much from rationalism but mr Rowland downplayed the important role they played in the development toward scientific thinking. I got the impression that mr Rowland is a christian thinker although he was nog straitforward about it. My suspicion was confirmed by some of the reviews so I decided not to spend more time with a biased thinker.
Profile Image for Ietrio.
6,948 reviews24 followers
November 1, 2022
...only let's not talk about the Government which licenses the corporations, let's not talk about the Government which gives the monopolies, let's not talk about the Government which takes from the poor to give to the Lecturers at the University, let's not talk about anything that has a relationship with Rowland's own god: the Government.

A deceitful book, from an intellectually dishonest person.
1 review1 follower
March 16, 2019
This book presents very good, informed ideas, which makes it worth reading, but it could have been better prose wise.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews