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Why Max Weber Was Wrong
by  _Samuel  Gregg_ (http://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/author/sgregg/)  


December 11th,  2013


The association of Protestantism with capitalism, famously articulated by 
Max  Weber and now widely accepted by many, is theologically dubious, 
empirically  disprovable, and largely incidental. An edited excerpt from 
Gregg's 
new book,  Tea Party Catholic.
 
Max Weber is justly famous for many things, but especially for  having 
developed a theory about the relationship between capitalism and  religion. The 
influence of _The  Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/The-Protestant-Ethic-Spirit-Capitalism/dp/1604599308)  
remains 
considerable, not  least because it has become a staple of sociological 
literature on the  subject.

Based on lectures he gave during a visit to America in 1904,  Weber’s 
Protestant Ethic maintained that capitalism’s nature had to be  understood as 
more than just producing and exchanging goods in a particular way  (e.g., free 
exchange) within a particular institutional setting (limited  government, 
etc.). At its heart, Weber insisted, capitalism was a state of  mind: an 
outlook that involved, among other things, the subordination of  emotion, 
custom, 
tradition, folklore, and myth to the workings of instrumental  reason. 
The real controversy begins with Weber’s argument that the decisive linkage 
 of this form of rationality with economic practices occurred primarily in  
Europe’s predominantly Protestant areas. He was particularly thinking of  
countries such as England and the Netherlands, which were home to large 
numbers  of Puritans and Calvinists, many of whom migrated to North America in 
the  seventeenth century. These forms of Protestantism, Weber posited,  
ingrained the belief among their adherents that they should avoid superficial  
hobbies, games, and entertainment. Instead, Christians should commit themselves 
 totally to whatever calling to which God had summoned them. Weber believed 
that  these forms of Protestantism, especially their central doctrine of  
predestination, helped to foster the type of focused minds and disciplined 
work  habits that are essential for market economies. 
According to Weber, these ascetic Protestants didn’t believe it was 
possible  to do good works to attain heaven in the next world. Either you were 
among the  elect, or you weren’t. Weber interpreted Calvin as suggesting that 
one  indication of election was the acquisition of wealth. It followed—or so 
Weber’s  theory went—that the accumulation of wealth encouraged people to 
see themselves  as destined to be saved. This, in turn, fostered a spirit that 
encouraged  believers to grow ever-greater amounts of wealth. 
On the surface, Weber’s proposition makes considerable sense. After all, 
many  culturally Catholic countries such as Portugal and Spain—not to mention 
almost  all Latin American nations—have lagged behind other Western nations 
in  terms of economic development. More careful analysis of Weber’s claims, 
however,  soon reveals them as less-than-adequate. 
The accuracy, for instance, of Weber’s interpretation of Calvinist theology 
 is open to question. _The  Westminster Confession_ 
(http://www.spurgeon.org/~phil/creeds/wcf.htm) —the profession of faith that 
dominated Calvinist 
and  Presbyterian theology from the sixteenth century onward, and on which 
Weber drew  in developing his ideas—indicates that the notion of “calling” in 
Puritan and  Calvinist thinking is difficult to reconcile with the meaning 
given to it by  Weber. The Confession clearly distinguishes between each 
person’s worldly  vocation and his ultimate calling. Moreover, the earthly 
calling of each  individual is not considered to constitute a positive or 
negative contribution  to that person’s salvation. 
The Westminster Confession also stresses that believers must ensure that  
their earthly vocation does not distract them from pursuing their heavenly  
calling. Weber, by contrast, seems to conflate the two. And on the subject of 
 vocation itself, the Confession insists that Christians follow that 
calling in  which they would be most serviceable to God rather than that which 
brought them  “the most honor” in the world. Nothing in the text suggests any  
particular emphasis on commerce, let alone the idea that acquiring material 
 wealth was somehow a sign of being among the elect. 
Second, the empirical evidence disproving Weber’s connection between  
Protestantism and the emergence of capitalism is considerable. Even Catholic  
critics of modern capitalism have had to concede that “the commercial spirit”  
preceded the Reformation by at least two hundred years. From the eleventh  
century onward, the words Deus enim et proficuum (“For God and Profit”)  
began to appear in the ledgers of Italian and Flemish merchants. This was not 
a  medieval version of some type of prosperity gospel. Rather, it symbolized 
just  how naturally intertwined were the realms of faith and commerce 
throughout the  world of medieval Europe. The pursuit of profit, trade, and 
commercial success  dominated the life of the city-states of medieval and 
Renaissance Northern Italy  and the towns of Flanders, not to mention the 
Venetian 
republic that exerted  tremendous influence on merchant activity throughout 
the Mediterranean long  before 1517. 
Since Weber’s time, much scholarly work has been done to illustrate the  
advanced state of market-driven economic development in the Middle Ages.  
Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, the Belgian scholar Raymond de Roover penned  
numerous _articles_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Business-Banking-Economic-Thought-Medieval/dp/0226725464/ref=sr_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1382650598&sr=1-3&keywor
ds=Raymond+de+Roover)   illustrating that, during the Middle Ages, 
financial transactions and banking  started to take on the degree of 
sophistication 
that is commonplace today.  Likewise, _The  Commercial Revolution of the 
Middle Ages_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Commercial-Revolution-Middle-Ages-950-1350/dp/0521290465)
 , by the Italian-American  historian of medieval European 
economic history, the late Robert S. Lopez,  shattered the historical claims 
that formed much of the background of Weber’s  argument. Lopez demonstrated in 
great detail the way in which the Middle Ages  “created the indispensable 
material and moral conditions for a thousand years of  virtually 
uninterrupted growth.” 
In recent decades, the historians Edwin Hunt and James Murray _have  
illustrated_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Business-Medieval-1200-1550-Cambridge-Textbooks/dp/0521495814)
  just how much the medieval period was characterized by  
remarkable innovation in methods of business organization. They also suggest  
that the advent of modernity actually heralded the expansion of state 
economic  intervention and regulation in an effort to constrain economic 
freedom. 
In a  similar fashion, the sociologist Rodney Stark _has gathered  together_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1400062284/)  disparate sources of 
historical and economic analysis to illustrate  the origins of capitalism 
and major breakthroughs in the theory and practice of  wealth creation in the 
medieval period. Central to Stark’s _analysis_ 
(http://catholiceducation.org/articles/history/world/wh0109.html)   is his 
highlighting of the way 
pre-Reformation Western Christianity saw the  world as one in which humans were 
called upon to use their reason and innate  creativity to develop its resources
—including economically. 
Here one could add that, before Adam Smith, some of the most elaborate  
thinking about the nature of contracts, free markets, interest, wages, and  
banking that developed after the Reformation was articulated in the _writings  
of Spanish Catholic scholastic thinkers_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Faith-Liberty-Economic-Scholastics-Economics/dp/0739105418/ref=sr_1_fkmr0_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1
382642256&sr=8-1-fkmr0&keywords=faith+and+liberty+chaufen)  of the 
sixteenth and seventeenth  centuries. Theologians such as Francisco de Vitoria 
OP, 
Martín de Azpilcueta,  Juan de Mariana SJ, and Tomás de Mercado OP, 
anticipated many of the claims made  by Smith two centuries later. 
To be sure, much of this thinking occurred by way of side-effect rather 
than  as a result of the systematic analysis undertaken by Smith. For as 
commercial  relationships expanded throughout Europe in the centuries preceding 
and  following the Reformation, there was a marked increase in the number of  
penitents asking their confessors for guidance about moral questions with a  
strong economic dimension. What was the just price? When was a person no 
longer  obliged to adhere to a contract? When was charging interest 
legitimate? When did  it become usurious? As a result, priests looked to 
theologians 
for guidance on  how to respond to their penitents’ questions. Thus, as Jürg 
Niehans stressed in  his _History  of Economic Theory_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/History-Economic-Theory-Contributions-1720-1980/dp/0801849764)
 : 
The scholastics thus found it necessary to descend  from theology into the 
everyday world of economic reality, of early capitalism,  foreign trade, 
monopoly, banking, foreign exchange and public finance. What one  knew about 
these things in the School of Salamanca was hardly less than Adam  Smith knew 
two hundred years later, and more than most students know today. 
Even when we consider modern capitalism’s emergence, a direct connection  
between this event and Protestantism is very open to question. The economic  
historian Jacques Delacroix, for instance, has highlighted many facts about 
this  period that Weber’s theory simply cannot account for. “Amsterdam’s 
wealth,”  Delacroix _writes_ 
(http://sf.oxfordjournals.org/content/80/2/509.short) , “was  centered on 
Catholic families; the economically advanced German 
Rhineland is  more Catholic than Protestant; all-Catholic Belgium was the 
second country to  industrialize, ahead of a good half-dozen Protestant 
entities.” 
A better explanation for why some parts of Europe lagged behind others is 
to  be found in the influence of absolutism and mercantilism. To our ears,  “
absolutism” is a word that contains echoes of despotic government. Yet the 
age  of absolutism, which lasted throughout most of Europe from about 1600 
until  1800, was a rather different phenomenon. Drawing heavily on the Divine 
Right of  Kings (a theological doctrine always disputed by the Catholic 
Church) for  legitimacy, absolutism was also associated with the rise of the 
nation-state  that began before the Reformation, but which accelerated after 
1517. 
Absolutism’s underlying motif was the conviction that centralizing  state 
power was the path to stronger and wealthier societies. In terms of  
commercial life, absolutism manifested itself in countries such as Lutheran  
Prussia, Catholic France, and Orthodox Russia in the form of ever-increasing  
restrictions on economic freedom. Governments began assuming more top-down  
direction of economic activity through subsidizing exports, imposing tariffs on 
 
imports, and mandating government monopolies of particular trade or products 
 that were then sold or leased to groups of merchants. Adam Smith famously 
called  this set of economic arrangements the mercantile system. 
It is difficult to downplay mercantilism’s effect on modern economic  
development. From the Age of Discovery to the late nineteenth century (and in  
many cases beyond), Catholic Latin America was largely dominated by an  
absolutist, mercantilist economic culture. Therein, Stark contends, lie some of 
 
the fundamental causes of Latin America’s slower economic development as  
compared to the United States. Even the dominant eighteenth-century Protestant  
power, Britain, engaged in mercantilist economic practices despite having  
rejected a drift toward absolutism in the previous century. And as every 
student  of the American Revolution knows, Britain’s mercantilist economic 
policies  contributed mightily to the outbreak of the War of Independence. 
Much more could be said about these historical observations. The point,  
however, is that the widespread association of one form of Protestantism with  
capitalism is theologically dubious, empirically disprovable, and largely  
incidental. To make these observations is not to propose that modern 
capitalism  was somehow constructed upon a “Catholic ethic.” That would be 
equally 
false. It  is simply to note that much of Weber’s particular analysis is 
very questionable  and that this should be acknowledged by economists, 
historians, and above all,  by Catholics. How ironic it would be if the last 
people 
to believe in Weber’s  Protestant ethic thesis were  Catholics!

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