Concerned with the origins of capitalism and the conditions that accompanied its birth, this work argues that capitalism is more than an economic system: it is a culture that affects not just the material but also the social, familial and even spiritual bases of existence.
As both a historian and an anthropologist, Alan Macfarlane is able to explore capitalist society from a number of original perspectives. It is the essence of his argument that capitalism is more than an economic system: it is a culture that affects not just the material but also the social, familial, and even spiritual bases of existence.
Drawing on new research data generated by detailed historical community studies, and literature on non-western societies, he offers searching observations on the origins of modern civilization. He considers, for example, the nature of evil, attitudes towards love and family, the phenomenon of violence, population change and revolution, and how we have come both to dominate and to revere the natural world. His investigations of these subjects lead him towards the answers to two crucial questions: where did capitalism come from, and why?