Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Author of ‘Aquinas and the Market’ wins Vatican’s Economy and Society prize
Author of ‘Aquinas and the Market’ wins Vatican’s Economy and Society prize
Jan 30, 2026 1:29 PM

Yesterday, Prof. Mary Hirschfield of Villanova University received the prestigious “Economy and Society International Prize”, a €30,000 biennial award given by the Vatican’s Centesimus Annus Foundation. The dual doctoral degree holder in economics and theology was granted the prize money for her groundbreaking book Aquinas and the Market: Toward a Humane Economy (Havard University Press, 2018).

The foundation’s fourth edition of the prize was attended by over one-hundred dignitaries, including fellow economists and theologians who had previously gathered for its 25th-anniversaryconference “New Policies and Lifestyles in the Digital Age” held inside the Vatican last May 24-26.

The Centesimus Annus Foundation is a Vatican-chartered academic institution that exists to promote the legacy of the St. John Paul II’s social encyclical by the same name through its conferences, courses, and research. Published in 1991 one-hundred years after Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum, which robustly defended private property and munism, the Polish pope’s Centesimus Annus is considered the Church’s most “pro-free market” social teaching, released to an increasingly freer world in the final days of the Cold War.

Prior to Hirschfeld receiving the Economy and Society International Prize, the foundation’s spokesman Costantino Coros wrote in a press release that Aquinas and the Market “offers a fascinating dialogue between the world of economics and the world of faith. Without contesting the value of some intuitions of contemporary economists, she incorporates them into a larger vision of human life drawing in particular from the anthropology of Thomas Aquinas.”

“Economics,” the statement continued, “should not govern our society but pursue man’s happiness. Material well-being is, in fact, an instrumental good that acquires meaning through its potential of contributing to the flowering of [the] human spirit.”

In the official summary made by Havard University Press, it is said that Hirschfeld’s Aquinas and the Market is a unique academic publication, for reasons which the Acton Institute knows all too well, taking into account that “economists and theologians usually inhabit different intellectual worlds.”

Economists investigate the workings of markets and tend to set ethical questions aside. Theologians, anxious to take up concerns raised by market es, often dismiss economics and lose insights into the influence of market incentives on individual behavior. Mary L. Hirschfeld, who was a professor of economics for fifteen years before training as a theologian, seeks to bridge these two fields in this innovative work about economics and the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas.

In a Thomistic approach, [as] she writes, ethics and economics cannot be reconciled if we begin with narrow questions about fair wages or the acceptability of usury. Rather, [she argues] we must begin with an understanding of how economic life serves human happiness. The key point is that material wealth is an instrumental good, valuable only to the extent that it allows people to flourish. Hirschfeld uses that insight to develop an account of a genuinely humane economy in which pragmatic and material concerns matter but the pursuit of wealth for its own sake is not the ultimate goal.

In a Vatican News radio interview with American journalist Christopher Wells, Hirschfeld explained her rationale for writing the book in the Thomistic tradition. “Basically what I ask is, ‘If I start with Aquinas’ principles about who the human person is, and what sort of world we live in, namely one that is created by God, how would I want to think about economics in light of those assumptions?’ And I work it out,” she said.

Hirschfeld admitted that using Aquinas’s medieval philosophy and theology, largely inspired by Aristotle and the early Church Fathers, is patible with modern capitalism since he allows us “to keep a fair amount of what economists have taught us about how the markets work… His framework permits us to make sense of those insights and to use them.”

“So [Aquinas] can affirm private property is a good thing, although he lived before the discovery, the realization that markets could coordinate our individual decisions and produce good social es.”

However, she concluded, Aquinas begins with “a view of the human person that’s different from the one that [most] economists use.” She said that according to Aquinas the human person’s “ultimate” and final happiness is found in God, not in material things or money which exist to serve as means to help achieve or bring about mon good and justice, and thus should not be used as ends in themselves for human flourishing.

“Happiness in this life is ordered around the higher goods that make life worth living.” Those higher goods, she said, “allow us to reflect God’s goodness in this life. Then that’s the core of happiness in this life for Aquinas… And if that’s what happiness in this life is about, then material wealth is to serve those goods”, instrumentally speaking.

The director of the Acton Institute’s Rome office, Kishore Jayabalan, published one of the best-written reviewsofAquinas and the Market last January 24 for the Religion & Liberty Transatlantic journal. Confirming her unique theological and economic cross-training, Jayabalan believes that Hirschfeld’s book is a valid attempt to bring traditional sparring partners more in harmony with one another:

Most theologians and philosophers tend to look down upon economics, but not Hirschfeld. She attempts to create a dialogue between theology and economics; something many religious leaders say is necessary but are themselves incapable of doing. How many of them would be able to see the economic downsides of rent control and the minimum wage as Hirschfeld does? The trick is in taking into account the objective reality of God and the subjective preferences of human beings expressed in the everyday operations of the marketplace.

While praising her work, Jayabalan said Hirschfeld’s Aquinas and the Market did have one defect. He said the ing of this work…is a neglect of the mediating ground between theology and economics, i.e. politics. Neither religion nor business is pletely private or individual affair; each takes place within a social context that at least implicitly aims towards some sort mon good.”

“Hirschfeld is well aware of the need for a hierarchical ordering of goods in any kind of Thomistic economics. It seems unlikely that such an ordering can take place without some kind of authority behind it. Who this authority would be and how it would govern are matters of politics rather than economics.”

All said, Aquinas and the Marketis certain to have a long shelf-life in Rome and beyond, ing a standard text for both today’s theologically-minded economists and economically-minded theologians. Hirschfeld’s book serves as a model negotiator between the two specialists.

(Image credit: Featured/middle image Pixabay and mons Top photo: courtesy of Deborah Castellano Lubov)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Compassion for the poor?
Denver’s homeless may get free tickets to see a movie or go to the zoo next month while the Democratic National Convention is in town next month, according to the Rocky Mountain News. The Colorado Coalition for the Homeless plans to get 500 movie tickets and passes for places such as the Denver Zoo and the Denver Museum of Nature and Science for the homeless that they work with. This plan obviously raises many questions, one of these being: how...
Tony Snow (1955-2008): The faith of an optimist
Tony Snow speaking at the 2001 Acton Annual Dinner The Acton Institute was deeply saddened to learn of the death of our dear friend Tony Snow. Snow was the keynote speaker at the 2001 Acton Annual Dinner, delivering his address one month after the terrorist attack on September 11. Snow was also a speaker for the Acton Lecture Series in 1996, where his humor was in full effect. In a more contemplative moment, Snow declared during the 2001 dinner lecture:...
Free trade follies
Last week presidential candidate John McCain distanced himself from economic adviser Phil Gramm, after ments that America had e a “nation of whiners” and that the current concerns over a lagging economy amounted to a “mental recession” rather than any real phenomena. The press and political reaction was swift and quizzical. What could Phil Gramm possibly mean? Why would an adviser to a presidential candidate publicly broadside the American electorate? As one editorial page wondered, “we can’t fathom the target...
Michigan Science, No. 7, Spring 2008
The newest issue of Michigan Science has been posted by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. I especially enjoyed reading Deneen Borelli’s piece on the failed “cap and trade” legislation titled, “Just the Facts.” Borelli looks at what cap-and-trade legislation would mean for Michigan consumers and businesses. She and I both noted in articles the hardest hit would be households with lower e. It seems like an obvious point, but it is still amazing that many policy makers and religious...
Defending the American Dream
The PowerBlog is well-represented this weekend at the Defending the American Dream Summit in Austin, Texas. Ray Nothstine and I have made the trek to Texas to engage and learn from a variety of organizations seeking to bring the power of new media to bear on the conservative movement. The Americans for Prosperity Foundation and RightOnline are the major sponsors of the Texas summit, which features keynote addresses from Barry Goldwater Jr. and Robert Novak, as well as talks by...
Woods on the Constitution
The prolific Thomas Woods has a new book out (with co-author Kevin Guzman): Who Killed the Constitution? Woods is the author of the Templeton Enterprise-award-winning The Church and the Market, a volume in the Lexington Books series, Studies in Ethics and Economics, which is edited by Acton’s Sam Gregg. I haven’t yet read Woods’ latest, but his work is always interesting and forcefully argued. And I’m inclined to agree with any effort to reassert some constitutional limits around our legal/political...
CRC Sea to Sea tour week 2
The second week of the CRC’s Sea to Sea bike tour is in the books. The second leg of the journey took the bikers from Kennewick to Boise, a total distance of 321 miles. There’s a basic theme in the daily prayers from the “Shifting Gears” devotional. There is a fundamentally environmental focus, and by that I mean not just the natural environment, but the economic, political, and social environment of the areas through which the bikers progress. For instance,...
Bureaucracy, not the Church, blocks Italian academic research
In the July 14-15 Italian edition article of the Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano, Luca M. Possati examines the crisis of the Italian university system. Where most secular intellectuals blame the Church for its suppression of “academic freedom,” it turns out the real culprit is the vast education and research bureaucracy propagated by the national government. Possati notes how the different governments have tried to reform public administration in different sectors, but have failed miserably, only creating more public debt, inefficiency,...
Anthony Bradley discusses Obama’s New Yorker image on NPR
Dr. Anthony Bradley, a research fellow at the Acton Institute and PowerBlog contributor, was on NPR’s News & Notes blogger roundtable to discuss the controversy over the New Yorker‘s latest magazine cover. He also discusses news about a mostly black neighborhood that didn’t have running water for almost fifty years and a racially ic book that was recently pulled from the shelves. Listen here. ...
Alaska Governor discusses Congressional energy inaction
Following up on mentary “Washington’s Unpopular War on Energy,” Alaska Governor Sarah Palin talks about her own frustration with Washington energy policies in an interview with Investor’s Business Daily. Governor Palin is of course in favor of drilling for more oil in Alaska, and she believes development can be done in a safe and clean manner. She also believes increasing the domestic supply of oil will have a positive affect on oil prices for Americans. The interview is a solid...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved