ABSTRACT

Purity condemns filth; piety disparages corruption. Amassing riches offered to a transcendental world, the priests of ancient faiths found themselves trapped in contradiction. By loaning out their resources to merchants, they made themselves pariahs to true prophets. Before Islam squared the circle, bringing capital mobility and credit creation into coexistence with devotion, religion stymied merchant capitalism. Spread through trade, Islam's innovations in commerce soothed the path to coexistence of credit and faith globally. Had a second form of capitalism - technological capitalism - not emerged, binding science to innovation, harmony between faith and capitalism would have prevailed. However, scientific advances deepen on empirical evidence that is buttressed by critical debate, which is anathema to powerful elites in countries saturated with religious nationalism. Consequently, easy cooperation between capitalism and religion is blocked in these lands, and so their potential for economic progress withers. Thus, many of these states, trapped in the invidious stranglehold of religion, are condemned to sustained poverty.

part |80 pages

Predation, purification, and prices

chapter |3 pages

Prologue

Fire

chapter |13 pages

Axial thought traditions

From heroic myth to social control

chapter |10 pages

The pendulum swing in the Greek Axial Age

chapter |13 pages

God as king in Jewish monotheism

chapter |7 pages

One God, one emperor

part |45 pages

Merchant capitalism

chapter |13 pages

Islamic merchant capitalism

chapter |8 pages

Mercantilism and the pendulum swing

chapter |5 pages

Japanese merchant capitalism

part |34 pages

Technological capitalism

chapter |22 pages

The pendulum swing in natural philosophy

chapter |10 pages

Nationalism and imperialism

part |55 pages

Implications

chapter |18 pages

Religious civil war and the religion trap

chapter |8 pages

Conclusions