A&M’s October Blog Comment Contest

September 22, 2009 by Stephen J. Haessler

Students currently taking either a high school theology or economics course or who are taking both a high school theology and an economics class this semester are invited to participate in the October A&M Blog Comment Contest. Here are the details.

Questions to Address in a Comment to this Blog Post:

  1. What is the economic thinking and moral reasoning of Mr. Michael Moore’s new film “Capitalism: A Love Story?” In other words, what is going on inside Michael Moore’s mind as the director of this film? What is the thought process?
  2. What are the strengths and weaknesses of the economic thinking and moral reasoning exhibited in this film in light of economic principles and Catholic social doctrine?

Background:

Does this syllogism capture the reasoning in the “Capitalism: A Love Story” film? Is it a valid and true argument? Is there a more apt syllogism?

  • Major premise: Capitalism manifests corrupt practices, corrupt institutions, and exploitation of the weak by the strong.
  • Minor premise: Corruption and exploitation are bad.
  • Conclusion: Therefore, capitalism is bad.

Rules:

  1. Students must identify themselves by name, school name, and class. For example: Stephen Haessler/Dominican HS/introductory economics, or Stephen Haessler/St. Stephen High School/christian living.
  2. Blog comments should be sent through school email accounts to verify enrollment whenever possible. If school email accounts are not available, personal email accounts may be used but student status must will be verified.
  3. Blog comments must address directly both questions in original, clear prose that are free of spelling, punctuation, and grammatical errors. Blog comment must be posted at the A&M Blog no later than midnight (Tucson time) on 31 October 2009.
  4. Blog comments should make one reference to a theological source, such as a Papal encyclical or other major document, and one reference to an economics source, such as an article by an academic economist, that supports the reasoning expressed in your comment.
  5. Blog comments must not exceed 500 words.

Student (and Classroom Teacher) Prizes:

  • 1st Prize for Best Theological and Economics comment = $100
  • 2nd Prize for Best Theological comment = $75
  • 3rd Prize for Best Economics comment = $50

Dates:

  • Contest Begins 28 September 2009
  • Contest Ends 31 October 2009 midnight

Questions:

If you would like more information please send it as a comment to this post.


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