Here's an oldie but goodie from the named thread above, quoting Christian Arnsperger from the first post:
"Don’t expect me to draw...a well-meaning denunciation of economic
materialism in the name of 'spirituality.' If I did that, I’d be
ignoring the very roots of modern economic thought. In reality, in fact,
the great thinkers of economics were working very consciously for the
salvation of humanity.... I think we need to go as far as saying that
economic thought has a strictly spiritual root.... The economy is,
therefore, less a technical-operational domain than an
existential-spiritual one.... Economics, therefore, the science of the
economy, is part and parcel of theology—not only neo-liberal economics
(as some left-wing critics claim, using the word 'theology' as a
degrading term), but all of economics to the extent that it ultimately
seeks to liberate Man. Marx, Keynes, and Hayek were, literally, the most
influential theologians of the 20th century; I say this not by analogy
or as an image, but as a literal description of what their study of
economic activity was about."
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