The Rise and Fall of the European Dream

The European Dream is often portrayed as the benign if not benevolent counterpart to the fading American Dream. Yet, as economic historian Joseph Lough shows in this essay, the European and American dreams are linked by more than their shared embrace of free market capitalism. In this essay Professo...

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Main Author: Joseph W.H. Lough
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International University of Sarajevo 2015-10-01
Series:Epiphany
Subjects:
EU
WTO
IMF
Online Access:http://epiphany.ius.edu.ba/index.php/epiphany/article/view/160/127
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spelling doaj-16ad3231b050478194092bf950cd87822020-11-24T21:24:27ZengInternational University of SarajevoEpiphany2303-68501840-37192015-10-01824365The Rise and Fall of the European DreamJoseph W.H. Lough0Department of Economics, University of California, Berkeley, USAThe European Dream is often portrayed as the benign if not benevolent counterpart to the fading American Dream. Yet, as economic historian Joseph Lough shows in this essay, the European and American dreams are linked by more than their shared embrace of free market capitalism. In this essay Professor Lough exposes the darker side of the European Dream, a side first expressed in the 1990s, but now fully revealed in Europe’s conflict with Greece. As Professor Lough shows, this dark side of the European Dream was already present at its birth in the 19th century, when GWF Hegel allegorized its birth and diffusion through a story about the Self-Moving Substance that is Subject. This story has received mathematically rigorous validation through convergence theories of today’s neoclassical and neoliberal economists. Yet is total domination by this Self-Moving Substance inevitable, much less desirable? Professor Lough shows how Europe could adopt an alternative, more sustainable European Dream to meet today’s pressing challenges.http://epiphany.ius.edu.ba/index.php/epiphany/article/view/160/127EuropeEuropean DreamHegelRobert LucasKarl MarxCapitalismEUEuropean Central BankWTOWorld BankIMF
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joseph W.H. Lough
spellingShingle Joseph W.H. Lough
The Rise and Fall of the European Dream
Epiphany
Europe
European Dream
Hegel
Robert Lucas
Karl Marx
Capitalism
EU
European Central Bank
WTO
World Bank
IMF
author_facet Joseph W.H. Lough
author_sort Joseph W.H. Lough
title The Rise and Fall of the European Dream
title_short The Rise and Fall of the European Dream
title_full The Rise and Fall of the European Dream
title_fullStr The Rise and Fall of the European Dream
title_full_unstemmed The Rise and Fall of the European Dream
title_sort rise and fall of the european dream
publisher International University of Sarajevo
series Epiphany
issn 2303-6850
1840-3719
publishDate 2015-10-01
description The European Dream is often portrayed as the benign if not benevolent counterpart to the fading American Dream. Yet, as economic historian Joseph Lough shows in this essay, the European and American dreams are linked by more than their shared embrace of free market capitalism. In this essay Professor Lough exposes the darker side of the European Dream, a side first expressed in the 1990s, but now fully revealed in Europe’s conflict with Greece. As Professor Lough shows, this dark side of the European Dream was already present at its birth in the 19th century, when GWF Hegel allegorized its birth and diffusion through a story about the Self-Moving Substance that is Subject. This story has received mathematically rigorous validation through convergence theories of today’s neoclassical and neoliberal economists. Yet is total domination by this Self-Moving Substance inevitable, much less desirable? Professor Lough shows how Europe could adopt an alternative, more sustainable European Dream to meet today’s pressing challenges.
topic Europe
European Dream
Hegel
Robert Lucas
Karl Marx
Capitalism
EU
European Central Bank
WTO
World Bank
IMF
url http://epiphany.ius.edu.ba/index.php/epiphany/article/view/160/127
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