ABSTRACT

The fields of morality and ethics have been left out significantly from socio-scientific study in general and in economics and finance in particular. Yet this book argues that in this age of post-modernist analytical inquiry, the study of morality and ethics is an epistemological requirement. This book illustrates the delimiting nature of mainstream economic reasoning in treating morality and ethics and highlights the potential contribution of analytical monotheism, as typified by the Islamic concept of Tahwid.

The principal purpose of this book is to undertake an introductory exploration of the critical area of comparative economic thought in order to place the nature and emergence of ethico-economic theory in its proper context. It is ultimately argued that such a post-orthodoxy revolutionary methodological worldview can be presented by Islamic political economy, Islamic economics and finance.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter |21 pages

The way forward

chapter |21 pages

Is there a possibility for heterodox Islamic economics?

A post-orthodoxy criticism

chapter |14 pages

The qur'anic phenomenological model of system

Application to human resource contra human capital theory

chapter |12 pages

Conclusion

From meta-science to ethico-economics