John Paul II’s Call for an Ethical Dimension of Globalization

Authors

  • Urszula Michalak

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18778/1899-2226.11.1.12

Keywords:

John Paul II, globalisation

Abstract

In the teaching of John Paul II’s the need of solidarity globalization is particularly stressed out as well as that of humanization of globalization processes. With the aim of doing it, one should be guided by unchanging social values: the truth, freedom, justice, solidarity, subsidiarity, love. The globalization has two faces: ▪ the benefits which it brings to the world, individual countries and its main beneficiaries, that is international corporations. ▪ negative effects which the developing countries and all people of the world experience (climatic changes, emission of harmful substances, drug addiction, moral nihilism, gradual decrease of human importance). It happens that complex processes caused by economical globalization make their way towards changing a human being into an element of a market, a bartered good or a factor devoid of meaning for decisive choices. As a consequence, a person may feel annihilated by impersonal mechanisms on a world’s scale and may gradually lose his own identity and personal dignity. Key words:

Published

2008-05-15

How to Cite

Michalak, U. (2008). John Paul II’s Call for an Ethical Dimension of Globalization. Annales. Ethics in Economic Life, 11(1), 135–142. https://doi.org/10.18778/1899-2226.11.1.12

Issue

Section

Articles