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Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition Paperback – July 12, 2011
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This book is about how the money system will have to change—and is already changing—to embody this transition. A broadly integrated synthesis of theory, policy, and practice, Sacred Economics explores avant-garde concepts of the New Economics, including negative-interest currencies, local currencies, resource-based economics, gift economies, and the restoration of the commons. Author Charles Eisenstein also considers the personal dimensions of this transition, speaking to those concerned with "right livelihood" and how to live according to their ideals in a world seemingly ruled by money. Tapping into a rich lineage of conventional and unconventional economic thought, Sacred Economics presents a vision that is original yet commonsense, radical yet gentle, and increasingly relevant as the crises of our civilization deepen.
Sacred Economics official website: http://sacred-economics.com/
- Print length469 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherNorth Atlantic Books
- Publication dateJuly 12, 2011
- Dimensions5.99 x 1.07 x 8.98 inches
- ISBN-109781583943977
- ISBN-13978-1583943977
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"This brilliant and beautifully written book is an indispensable must-read for all those who believe our economic system is terminally sick and in need of radical, sacred rehaul. Charles Eisenstein has the great gift of being able to make complex ideas both thrilling and inspiring. I hope this book begins a serious, worldwide conversation on how we can reinvent our attitude to money."
—Andrew Harvey, author of The Hope: A Guide to Sacred Activism
"While political pundits, financial analysts and Occupiers fumble on how to transcend the intensifying global financial crisis, Eisenstein is trailblazing bold new ideas and possibilities for how we conduct monetary exchange."
—Jonathan Phillips, Huffington Post blog
"If you want a convincing account of just how deep the shift in our new axial age is and must be, look no further than this brilliant book by Charles Eisenstein, one of the deepest integrative thinkers active today."
—Michel Bauwens, founder of the P2P Foundation
"With his breadth of knowledge, enthusiasm, commitment, diligence, and sensitivity, Charles has become a beacon of hope for others. Your heart and mind will be opened by this treasure of a book that shines with wisdom of crucial importance to our troubled world today."
—Kamran Mofid, founder of the Globalisation for the Common Good Initiative
“[Sacred Economics] meticulously explains why our current system will inevitably give rise to cyclical and worsening economic crises. [Eisenstein] exposes the myths and lies that sustain power structure, the social and spiritual devastation in which we are all complicit, and lays the foundation for a way of thinking that can restore hope and help us emerge to a positive future. … Eisenstein’s book provides some of the most creative and hopeful ideas out there.”
—New Consciousness Review
“[Charles Eisenstein] puts his money where his mouth is. Sacred Economics: Money, Gift and Society in the Age of Transition is published under a Creative Commons copyright. … This arrangement, similar to that of open-source software, is a tiny sample of the economic system that Eisenstein predicts for our future. … Of course, a new economy means the old one needs to go. That would be scary news if not for Eisenstein’s optimistic way of describing the transition. He effectively argues that when we dismantle monetization, we give birth to community. Together, we can help noble impulses become profitable enterprises. Money may have caused our biggest problems, but redefining it could help us solve those same problems.”
—Grid Magazine
"'If anything is sacred in this world, it is surely not money.' So says Charles Eisenstein, who believes that people can act outside of the money economy, despite the power it has over their lives."
—Foreword Reviews
"Eisenstein is no revolutionary or anarchist. In fact, he’s an evolutionary. While reading Sacred Economics, I realized I had not achieved an objective relationship with our money system. I don’t have money. It has me."
—Common Ground
Also by Charles Eisenstein:
The Ascent of Humanity:
"Brilliant and original, with great depth of insight and understanding, Eisenstein's Ascent of Humanity easily ranks with the works of such giants of our age as David Bohm, Julian Jaynes, Jean Gebser, Whitehead. It is a profoundly serious, indeed somber portrait of our times, even as it opens a door of honest hope amidst the dark destiny we have woven about us. Accept the challenge of this major accomplishment and discover the light shining within it."
—Joseph Chilton Pearce, author of The Crack in the Cosmic Egg, Magical Child, Evolution's End, and The Biology of Transcendence
"Quite marvelous, a hugely important work... This book is truly needed in this time of deepening crisis."
—John Zerzan, author of Future Primitive and Elements of Refusal
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : 1583943978
- Publisher : North Atlantic Books (July 12, 2011)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 469 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9781583943977
- ISBN-13 : 978-1583943977
- Item Weight : 1.65 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.99 x 1.07 x 8.98 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #837,322 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #774 in Political Economy
- #831 in Theory of Economics
- #1,444 in Economic Conditions (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Customers find the book insightful and well-written, with one noting it's an incredibly clear thinker and writer. Moreover, they appreciate its value, particularly its focus on internalizing social and ecological costs of production, and one customer describes it as a clear vision of a realistic way forward. Additionally, the book receives positive feedback for its empathetic approach, with one review mentioning a deep feeling of connection with the author. However, the readability receives mixed reactions, with some finding it realistic while others consider it a heavy read.
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Customers find the book insightful, describing it as a worthwhile thought experiment with good presentation of concepts.
"...acknowledging our deeper unmet needs for connectedness, play, and creative action toward creating a beautiful world. May we begin." Read more
"...In his exhaustive research, Eisenstein digs far beneath the foundations of conventional thought and in the process uproots Smith, Mill, Marx,..." Read more
"...The ideas it covered are so radical and with so many ramifications that it will easily be dismissed by most as impractical and over-idealistic if..." Read more
"...In Chapter 17 he puts all these together as a symbiotic interconnected program for a peaceful transition to a stable, sustainable economy in harmony..." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, finding it lucid and easy to understand, with one customer noting its extensive bibliography.
"...Lucidly written, the first part of the book explains the increasingly dysfunctional workings of the grow-or-die financial economy in great..." Read more
"...I read it with Bliss, on every page recognizing the Truth, what I had known but not had words for, what I had felt was right but had not been able..." Read more
"...were and are still functioning and growing. There is an extensive bibliography for those who want a little more grist for the mill. I..." Read more
"...Beyond being an easy to understand critique of the priorities of our economy, Sacred Economics builds a strong case for solving our problems by..." Read more
Customers find the book valuable, appreciating its approach to internalizing social and ecological costs of production, with one customer noting it's worth $20,000 and more.
"...economic and monetary localization, 5) the social dividend, 6) economic degrowth, 7) gift culture and P2P (peer-to-peer) economics...." Read more
"...social dividends to redistribute money, internalizing the social and ecological costs of production, and preservation of the commons; going so far..." Read more
"...my mind with many ideas I was not familiar with, especially the gift economy and renewing the commons as a means to motivate conservation...." Read more
"...of the book is that to live successfully and happily in this time of decreasing natural resources, we must build/strengthen relationships with our..." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's empathetic approach, with one customer noting how it creates a deep connection with the author, while another mentions how it involves readers as human beings.
"...Sacred economy, on the other hand, is egalitarian, inclusive, personal, bond-creating, sustainable, and nonaccumulative...." Read more
"...Compactly, thoughtfully, and with feeling - Eisenstein shows how the history of economics and of our relationship to money have led us to this..." Read more
"...eyes on like every other page just because of this deep feeling of connection with the author ... because the book is about all of our fears, dreams..." Read more
"...data, philosophical approach but extremely important, involving us as human beings, spirits living this experience on Earth, as the drivers to..." Read more
Customers appreciate the visual presentation of the book, with one noting it provides a clear vision of a realistic way forward.
"...our current economic system, and then offers a clear vision of a realistic way forward to the more beautiful world our hearts know is possible...." Read more
"This book it illuminating!..." Read more
"It shows really good pointa in a very human way, but is way too long. It could say the same in a third of the length" Read more
"Not only does Charles Eisenstein clearly articulate a beautiful vision for the transformation of our economy into one that creates kindness, he..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's readability, with some finding it realistic, while others describe it as a heavy read and too ethereal to be practical.
"...If you are like me and some of the book seems a bit unrealistic, I urge you, please keep an open mind until the end...." Read more
"...Sacred Economics as described by Charles Eisenstein is realistic...." Read more
"...the book, the concept of a negative-interest rate seems far-fetched, gimmicky and not worth the attention that is given to it in this book." Read more
"...Sobering to read but read it anyway!..." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 22, 2012In his earlier book, The Ascent of Humanity, Eisenstein traces all of the converging crises of our age to a common source - Separation, the ideology of the discrete and separate self - which he sees as an illusion. In this latest work he picks up on the theme of separation by beginning with a description of the economics of separation in which money has become not only a universal aim but a universal means as well, whereby we mortgage our dreams to money. He does not advocate the abolition of money, but restoring it to its proper place. Happily, his analysis undercuts the Chicago School of Economics ideology that is constantly beaten into our brains by the mainstream media. He carefully and logically deconstructs the arguments put forward by the spokespeople for that present system.
The second part of the book is on the economics of reunion which he sums up in seven shifts that are needed, forming his interconnected program for a peaceful transition to a stable, sustainable economy in harmony with Nature. He holds that the material world will come to be regarded as sacred, thus erasing the dichotomy between the material and the spiritual. The shifts are: 1) negative-interest currency, 2) elimination of economic rents, and compensation for depletion of the commons, 3) internalization of social and environmental costs, 4) economic and monetary localization, 5) the social dividend, 6) economic degrowth, 7) gift culture and P2P (peer-to-peer) economics. For each of the seven he notes what the motivation is for this shift, how to make the transition and the policy for it, and what the economic life will look like.
I want to say more about number 1 - negative-interest currency, which involves imposing penalties on money that is not in motion. He ties negative-interest money directly into the current debt crisis, and clearly charts a path by which we can gradually (hence non-violently) draw down the concentration of wealth and get money in motion where it matters most: in the hands of those who are not uber-wealthy. It reverses the dynamic we have today, where it is profitable to deplete the commons.
Not being inclined toward economic theory, I was most intrigued with Part III of this book, Living the New Economy, which I found both practical and inspiring. Eisenstein sees the foundation of a sacred economy as gift consciousness. He notes that we have become even more afraid of receiving than of giving and that to willingly receive a gift is itself a form of generosity. We tend to use money to mean that we can pay and then we don't pay attention to our fellow human beings. So the first step toward relearning gift culture is to learn to give the gift of fully receiving the gift of another. That is one of the most important gifts we can give.
The old economics has a concentration of wealth, excludes those who can't pay, is anonymous and depersonalized, shatters community and connection, and is oriented toward accumulation of money and property. Sacred economy, on the other hand, is egalitarian, inclusive, personal, bond-creating, sustainable, and nonaccumulative. The positive word Eisenstein brings is that the old economics can't last. We can prepare for the new by living from it now, today!
Another step toward the new economy then, is nonaccumulation, or as we used to call it, "voluntary simplicity." It is a kind of economic de-cluttering; it keeps the heart light and free. There is no moralism here. Keep and use what you need; just don't aggregate large amounts of capital. Remember that the seeming security of accumulation is an illusion. If you have inherited excess wealth, the challenge is to give it in a way that is beautiful - like restoring and protecting the natural, social, cultural and spiritual commons. Eisenstein has a strong aversion to charging interest. He says if you want to invest in a village, give a woman a cow. Or if her dignity demands it, lend her money at zero interest. Invest in a wholesome future; do not try to make money off of the situation.
What he says about right livelihood reminds me of his book on food (The Yoga of Eating). He says "don't live by principles," but to "trust what feels good and right." He says to do that even if you want to work for a hedge fund, because he trusts that as your awareness grows, such work may not feel good and right and that trusting that feeling will mean it will guide you when it comes time to quit that job for something courageous. "Trust that you want to do beautiful things with our life." He insists that you not guilt yourself into working for some NGO, because it is important to develop the capacity to give your energies toward something you love. Eisenstein himself has moved toward doing what he loves and the gift economy by writing his passionate books and making them available free online, inviting a gift from readers who want to express their gratitude. He does not charge a fee for speeches or retreats, although he requests that expenses be covered and encourages attendees or sponsors to give what feels balanced and appropriate to them and reflects their gratitude.
Sacred Economics as described by Charles Eisenstein is realistic. It does not go along with the common pretense that we are isolated individuals who have no need of others. It recognizes that we live in community, are born and die naked, and need one another and the natural world to live. Such an economics moves toward acknowledging our deeper unmet needs for connectedness, play, and creative action toward creating a beautiful world. May we begin.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 21, 2011Review for Sacred Economics
Sacred Economics is the most important book to come out in years, perhaps decades, perhaps since Adam Smith or J.S. Mill or Karl Marx or the founding of the Chicago School of Economics. Reminiscent of Jared Diamond's groundbreaking work on the rise and collapse of ancient civilizations, Eisenstein takes on another perennial mystery: the rise and collapse of national economies. In his exhaustive research, Eisenstein digs far beneath the foundations of conventional thought and in the process uproots Smith, Mill, Marx, Greenspan, the entire Chicago School of Economics--indeed, the entire field of political economy. Where both modern and classical economists root themselves in the question of property, wealth and the commons--that is, how much of each should be privatized (at one extreme, the Chicago School says virtually all of it, at the other, Marxists say none at all)--Eisenstein unearths what he calls, "the story of money," presenting it as the soil in which property and wealth necessarily grow and accumulate into fewer and fewer hands. By examining the origins of currency and the concomitant birth and subsequent growth of usury, Eisenstein's story of money exposes the soil feeding our political economy. In the process, he shows us what politicians (left, center and right), economists, as well as ecologists and "green" supporters have been missing all along: if we change the story of money, we are empowered to collectively use currency for benign purposes rather than get used by it for economically "rational" purposes (each of which is almost always linked in some way with environmental destruction, human exploitation, alienation, anomie, and/or war).
According to Eisenstein, by creating a story of money based on humanistic principles rather than economically "rational" ones (i.e. the ones that have driven political economy since the dawn of civilization and are currently leading to increased environmental and human degradation), we could cut the chains that for centuries, have shackled liberty, justice and the pursuit of happiness to interest rates, debt, the Comintern and/or the pursuit of bank notes (or cowrie shells). In creating this new story, we could, in other words, disconnect from the millennia old usury economy which essentially says, "the more money you have, the more money you will get (via interest)." And in doing so we extinguish the roots of both human and environmental exploitation that are part and parcel of our current system. When we back money with humanistic principles rather than gold--or in this day and age, bits on a computer screen controlled by banks--liberty, justice and the pursuit of happiness each take on an entirely new and more profound meaning.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2011I read a book a day, run a Body Mind Spirit Book Club, spent half my earnings in book stores, but I have never written a book review until now. If you still don't see how important this book is to me, maybe you should know I wrote off a $20,000 debt someone owed me and asked nothing of him in return except to read this book. And I have to add that I don't really have that sort of money to throw away. This is how bad I want everyone to read it, because on its pages are not words but a vision of hope for the future of humanity.
I will keep this short because the average person don't have time to read too many long reviews. I have no intention to expand on what others have already said about the book. While they had done a wonderful job, I don't think any summary or synopsis will do it justice. The ideas it covered are so radical and with so many ramifications that it will easily be dismissed by most as impractical and over-idealistic if read in snippets. Half way through my reading of it, I was still skeptical if ignorance, social conditioning and resistance could ever be overcome, but every chapter took me one step closer to believing that it's really the answer I had been waiting for. It's a manual for the future ! I have my work cut out for me. Everyone has a part to play and that's why everyone should read it. And like a manual, it has to be read from cover to cover !
Top reviews from other countries
- Adrian E.Reviewed in France on November 20, 2011
5.0 out of 5 stars Knowledge is power!
The year is 2011. The world is in total turmoil economically and war is the name of the game for western nations eager to steal precious resources from middle-eastern states. Protests flourish globally while the 1% replace governments and install technocrat representatives to do their bidding. The people are being robbed of all their wealth ensuring that 2012 will be the mother of all battles for human survival. When people have nothing, they have nothing to lose! This book peels back the layers to expose what is happening right under our noses and provides a crucially important guide on how to survive. Forewarned is forearmed. Having a blueprint of the actions you need to take is paramount for your survival. Sadly, most will never get to read this book.
- David hallReviewed in Australia on July 1, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars A kinder way
Eisenstein points the way to a kinder and beneficial economic climate, free from the tyranny of usury.
A thought provoking read especially for those currently (2014) watching the US and many other national economies slide
into a mire of debt and worthless fiat currency.
- Peter MonienReviewed in Germany on October 27, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars An eye opening book about a potential other economic system based on a gift economy
"Trapped by the madness of growth-demanding money, we compulsively produce more and more cheap, ugly things we don’t need while suffering a poverty of things that are beautiful, unique, personal, and alive. That poverty, in turn, drives continued consumption, a desperate quest to fill the void left by a material environment bereft of relatedness."
It is worthwhile to think about the current system and its shortcomings. But it is even more valuable to think about potential other systems. That is why this book is so valuable.
- Robin LovelaceReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 7, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Degrowth is the solution: here's why
I wrote a review for this book in my local magazine NowThen (Google "Sacred Economics, NowThen, Sheffield" for the full version complete with artwork: it's in issue 59). Here is an extract, plus some closing thoughts (Amazon has passed my censorship test if this gets published - due to reference to free (Creative Commons licensed) versions of this book):
"[... Ecotechnic Future: Envisioning a Post-Peak World provided a convincing vision of the future based on the disintegration of advanced civilisation due resource depletion.] The problem is that industrial civilisation shows no sign of slowing down, let alone of pressing the auto-disintegrate button any-time soon. On the contrary, hyper capitalism has proved to be a tough old bugger, akin to Wile E Coyote from Looney Tunes; it takes a hammering from every side yet always comes back to terrorise us again. Even after its founding assumptions are disproved and worldwide waves of protest decry its idiocy, the bastard just won't die. Land-grabs, adverts targeting children and new oil drilling techniques ensure that Greer's expectation, that the metaphorical Wile E will finally just top himself, is optimistic to say the least.
Sacred Economics by Charles Eisenstein is equally visionary, but starts from a different premise; the monetary machine that directs human affairs has gone AWOL and now benefits no-one, least of all the degraded psychopaths at the top, who try in vain to control the beast. Like Greer, Eisenstein encourages de-monetising your life, focussing instead on true wealth; the people and environment that surround you. Unlike Greer, he believes in creating a much better world: "Are we so broken that we would aspire to anything less than a sacred world?"
This may seem utopian, but Sacred Economics provides pragmatic solutions at every level. Individuals can replace monetary relationships with real ones, buy less and re-use more. Communities can set-up social enterprises. And, when the current batch of growth-obsessed politicians get booted out of office, nations can implement a raft of sensible measures to exorcise the financial demons from our economy.
Sacred Economics is a cracking read that I cannot recommend highly enough. If you're not sure about beg-borrow-or-buying such a chunky lump of paper, you're free to grab every chapter of it from the internet, where it has been placed in its entirety under a Creative Commons licence at sacred-economics.com"
To this I would add that Eisenstein strays a little too far into the "sacred". (One example: "By the same token, by fostering within ourselves a realization of the sacredness inherent in materiality, and by aligning our work with that sacredness, we lay the social and psychic foundation of an economy in which more and more of the things we make and do for each other are beautiful, personal, alive, and ensouled." - Even ignoring the fact he invented the last word in that sentence it is nigh on possible to understand!) At this stage Eisenstein would have been well advised to stick to the concrete economic and pragmatic reasons why his suggestions are sensible. But this should not stop anyone from buying (or downloading, for free from his website) this generally very well written book. Clearly infinite economic growth is not feasible, and this book provides the best "non-collapse" narrative for dealing with it that I have read. Tim Jackson's "Prosperity without growth" ( Prosperity without Growth: Economics for a Finite Planet free online) provides the best political response I've read, and this links well with an emerging political/activist movement of Degrowth.
In summary please get this book and spread the message. You will not regret it for one moment.
- AthikhoReviewed in India on October 18, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Thought provoking
Very nice Idea