Ethics and Finance: the role of mathematics
Timothy C. Johnson

TL;DR
This paper explores the historical and ethical foundations of the Fundamental Theorem of Asset Pricing, linking it to Virtue Ethics and examining its implications for economic theory and ethics.
Contribution
It offers a novel perspective by connecting the theorem to Virtue Ethics and history, challenging the conventional neo-classical economic narrative.
Findings
The Fundamental Theorem aligns with Virtue Ethics principles.
Historical approaches to pricing were forgotten between 1700 and 2000.
Viewing the theorem through Virtue Ethics impacts economic interpretations.
Abstract
This paper presents the contemporary Fundamental Theorem of Asset Pricing as being equivalent to approaches to pricing that emerged before 1700 in the context of Virtue Ethics. This is done by considering the history of science and mathematics in the thirteenth and seventeenth century. An explanation as to why these approaches to pricing were forgotten between 1700 and 2000 is given, along with some of the implications on economics of viewing the Fundamental Theorem as a product of Virtue Ethics. The Fundamental Theorem was developed in mathematics to establish a `theory' that underpinned the Black-Scholes-Merton approach to pricing derivatives. In doing this, the Fundamental Theorem unified a number of different approaches in financial economics, this strengthened the status of neo-classical economics based on Consequentialist Ethics. We present an alternative to this narrative.
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Taxonomy
TopicsEconomic Theory and Institutions · Economic theories and models · Economic Theory and Policy
