FACTOID # 125: India’s criminal courts acquitted over a million defendants in 1999, more than the next 48 surveyed countries combined.
 
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Encyclopedia > Covetousness
Look up greed in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Greed is a desire to obtain more money, wealth or material possessions than one needs. Greed is listed as one of the Catholic seven deadly sins, usually by the synonym of avarice. Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Wiktionary full URL is a sister project to Wikipedia intended to be a free wiki dictionary (including thesaurus and lexicon) in every language. ... Money Money is any marketable good or token used by a society as a store of value, a medium of exchange, and a unit of account. ... Wealth usually refers to money and property. ... See also: 7 Sins // History The seven deadly sins, also known as the capital vices or cardinal sins, were first introduced when Greek monastic theologian Evagrius of Pontus drew up a list of eight offenses and deadly human passions, the sins as eight passions, and they were, in order of...


Greedy individuals are often believed to be harmful to society as their motives often appear to disregard the welfare of others: if one person is to increase in wealth, somebody else must be decreasing in wealth (assuming, of course, that a market economy is a zero sum game). However, greed has become more acceptable (and the word less frequent) in Western culture, where the desire to acquire wealth is an important part of capitalism. A market economy is an economy in which goods and services are traded according to their exchange values. ... Zero-sum describes a situation in which a participants gain (or loss) is exactly balanced by the losses (or gains) of the other participant(s). ... In common usage capitalism refers to an economic system in which all or most of the means of production are privately owned and operated, and where investment and the production, distribution and prices of commodities (goods and services) are determined privately in a free market, rather than by the state. ...


When greed entails the covetousness of another person's possessions the term envy is used. When greed is applied to the subject of the excessive consumption of food or drink the term gluttony is often used, another of the Catholic seven deadly sins. See Envy (band) for the Japanese hadcore band. ... The word drink is primarily a verb, meaning to ingest liquids. ... Gluttony is one of the Seven Deadly Sins. ...


Buddhists believe greed is based on incorrectly connecting material wealth with happiness. This is caused by a deluded view that exaggerates the positive aspects of an object. Statues of Buddha such as this, the Tian Tan Buddha statue in Hong Kong, remind followers to practice right living. ...


See also

Miser is the term for a person who is reluctant to spend money, usually for the point where he or she forgoes even basic comforts. ...

External Links

  • A Buddhist View on Attachment

  Results from FactBites:
 
Of the Heinousness of Covetousness (728 words)
In this respect covetousness is like a dropsy, which increaseth thirst by much drinking; and like a fire, which by addition of fuel is the more fierce.
The desire of a covetous man ariseth from abundance, and in that respect is unnatural; for nature is satisfied with sufficiency.
Covetousness is like Pharaoh's lean cows, 'which did eat up the fat cows; and when they had eaten them up, it could not be known that they had eaten them; but they were still as ill-favoured as at the beginning,' Gen. xii.
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