Money understood as meant to circulate within communities for mutual flourishing, not accumulate in isolation or concentrate in hoarding.
Yacob's philosophy emphasizes the interconnection of human beings through reason and shared moral capacity. Money, in this view, is fundamentally communal—it gains meaning through circulation that strengthens the whole community. This contrasts with wealth as isolated possession or hoarding. Communal wealth circulation examines how money moves: Does it stay local or drain to distant elites? Does it create opportunity for others or concentrate power? Does it support mutual flourishing? This principle suggests that money locked away contributes nothing to community health; money that circulates through fair wages, reinvestment in community, and mutual aid strengthens everyone's capacity for reason and dignity. Historical examples show how local currency systems, cooperative businesses, and mutual aid networks embody this principle. For individuals, it raises questions about investment, lending, and consumption practices. The underlying insight is Yacob's: we are beings of reason and dignity together. Money that honors this flows in ways that strengthen collective capacity rather than isolate individual advantage.
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