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The Formation Of A “Spirit Of Capitalism” In Upper Germany: Leonhard Fronsperger’S “On The Praise Of Self-Interest”

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  • Klump, Rainer
  • Pilz, Lars

Abstract

In 1564, Leonhard Fronsperger, a military expert and citizen of the Free Imperial City of Ulm in Upper Germany, publishes the booklet “On the Praise of Self-Interest” (“Von dem Lob deß Eigen Nutzen”). Using the form of a satirical poem, he demonstrates how the individual pursuit of self-interest can lead to the common good. Writing long before Bernard Mandeville and Adam Smith, Fronsperger presents a thorough analysis of all kinds of self-interested social, political, and economic relations. His praise of self-interest demonstrates how, over the sixteenth century, the interplay of economic success (in particular in major trading cities), a more realistic conception of human behavior, and some aspects of humanism and the Reformation led to a new understanding of the origins of economic dynamics. This becomes the basis for what Max Weber ([1904–05] 2009) would later term “the spirit of capitalism.”

Suggested Citation

  • Klump, Rainer & Pilz, Lars, 2021. "The Formation Of A “Spirit Of Capitalism” In Upper Germany: Leonhard Fronsperger’S “On The Praise Of Self-Interest”," Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Cambridge University Press, vol. 43(3), pages 401-419, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:jhisec:v:43:y:2021:i:3:p:401-419_4
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