...observations and ramblings from a learner and traveler...

17 February 2018

The Critical Weakness of the Protestant Work Ethic

  My friend Mehmet Günenç recently gave me a copy of his short book, The History of Moral Philosophy (Ahlakın Felsefi Tarihi). In it, he traces the conceptual development of moral philosophy from Plato to Nietzsche; (he's a professor of philosophy). I haven't read the whole book yet, but one part I have read deals with the Protestant work ethic. His summary at the end of that section is insightful, although we would see some things differently. 

When we evaluate religion in terms such as much more intense work, individualism, independent retirement, or productivity, we will see a person who worships God through their profession. However, there is no hindrance for this person not to turn into the type of person who worships their profession. Their profession will be life for them, a field of action. They will exist for their profession. 
 (page 61; emphasis mine)

  The critical issue is a matter of worship. Who or what do we worship, and when does the true recipient of worship (God) get overshadowed in our hearts and actions and lives by the means with which we seek to honor and love and serve God. In other words, we must be always alert to the reality of our worship, not just to the confession that we acknowledge with our conscious thought.

I am attaching the original in case someone with a better grasp of philosophical Turkish wants to correct my understanding / translation of the text. 

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