Yacob rejected blind obedience to authority; he advocated critical questioning of established institutions, a principle essential to evaluating banking practices and protecting consumer interests.
Zera Yacob's philosophical method began with radical doubt—he refused to accept inherited dogma without personal examination and reasoned justification. This epistemological stance directly applies to banking, where institutions demand trust and compliance without encouragement for critical scrutiny. Yacob would insist that customers and regulators question banking assumptions: Why do fees exist at all? Can they be justified? Are interest rates market-determined or artificially inflated? Do banking oligopolies serve humanity? His approach rejects the authority-worship that says 'bankers know best; trust the system.' Instead, critical examination means demanding evidence, questioning profit motives, and evaluating whether banking practices align with human flourishing. Regulatory frameworks inspired by Yacob's philosophy would mandate transparency specifically to enable this critical examination. Banking cannot claim legitimacy through authority alone—it must withstand reasoned scrutiny and prove its practices defensible to the people who depend on it.
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