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POLIS 2107 - Passions and Interests: The History of Greed
University Course Planner The University of Adelaide Australia

POLIS 2107 - Passions and Interests: The History of Greed

Career: Undergraduate
Units: 3
Term: 3820
Campus: North Terrace
Contact: Up to 3 hours per week
Available for Study Abroad and Exchange: Yes
Available for Non-Award Study: Check with School
Assumed Knowledge: At least 12 units of Level I undergraduate study
Incompatible: POLI 2017, POLI 2107, POLI 3017
Assessment: Tutorial assessment 10%, Minor Essay 30%, Major Essay 60%
Syllabus:

The course attempts to solve the puzzle of how greed was transformed from a Deadly Sin (avarice) to a cool virtue. How could Gordon Gecko manage seduce his audience so easily in the movie Wall Street with his 'Greed is Good' speech? How did we get from there to here? The course will canvas seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth century responses to the emergence of market society and will trace the demise of classical, feudal and Renaissance idealism and the emerging 'bourgeois' mentality of the enlightenment era. The transformation of commercial activity from a base occupation to its culmination as a 'calling' is explored as part of an intellectual history of the legitimation of the idea of greed. This history will cover, among other things, an exploration of the following institutions, phenomena and ideas: self-interest; the division of labour; markets; luxury; the proper role of the state: liberalism and its critics; progress; virtue; classical communitarianism, anarchism, utilitarianism, classical political economy, the guaranteed basic income and the Grameen Bank. The course will conclude with a close study of the film Wall Street and a reflection on whether enlightened self-interest is enough to keep societies in motion. Featured thinkers include: Marcus Aurelius, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Mandeville, Adam Smith, Marx, Weber, Hayek, Fukuyama, Singer and van Parjis.

Course Fees

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Student Status

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Commonwealth supported
Full fee paying

Study Level

Undergraduate
Postgraduate Coursework
Non Award

Program of Study

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Units
EFTSL
Amount
3
0.125
          
  


Course Outline

A Course Outline which includes Learning Outcomes, Learning Resources, Learning & Teaching for this course may be accessed here


Critical Dates

Term Last Day to Add Online Census Date Last Day to WNF Last Day to WF
3820 Mon 06/08/2018 Fri 31/08/2018 Fri 14/09/2018 Fri 26/10/2018


Class Details

Enrolment Class: Lecture
Class Nbr Section Size Available Dates Days Time Location
24976 LE01 100 39 24 Jul - 11 Sep Tuesday 12pm - 1pm Lower Napier, LG29, Lecture Theatre
26 Jul - 13 Sep Thursday 1pm - 2pm Barr Smith South, 534, Forum Lecture Theatre
2 Oct - 23 Oct Tuesday 12pm - 1pm Lower Napier, LG29, Lecture Theatre
4 Oct - 25 Oct Thursday 1pm - 2pm Barr Smith South, 534, Forum Lecture Theatre
Related Class: Tutorial
Class Nbr Section Size Available Dates Days Time Location
24977 TU05 22 6 24 Jul - 11 Sep Tuesday 1pm - 2pm Engineering Nth, N132, Teaching Room
2 Oct - 23 Oct Tuesday 1pm - 2pm Engineering Nth, N132, Teaching Room
24978 TU04 22 3 25 Jul - 12 Sep Wednesday 12pm - 1pm Lower Napier, LG23, Teaching Room
3 Oct - 24 Oct Wednesday 12pm - 1pm Lower Napier, LG23, Teaching Room
24979 TU03 22 15 25 Jul - 12 Sep Wednesday 6pm - 7pm Napier, 108, Teaching Room
3 Oct - 24 Oct Wednesday 6pm - 7pm Napier, 108, Teaching Room
24981 TU01 22 3 26 Jul - 13 Sep Thursday 12pm - 1pm Engineering Nth, N132, Teaching Room
4 Oct - 25 Oct Thursday 12pm - 1pm Engineering Nth, N132, Teaching Room