Proper estate and inheritance structures protect vulnerable dependents while preserving their human dignity and capacity for agency.
Zera Yacob insisted that reason demands we honor human dignity in all circumstances—including dependency. Too often, inherited wealth infantilizes heirs or abandons vulnerable family members to poverty. This concept asks: how can estate structures provide genuine care while respecting the rational agency and dignity of those who depend on inherited resources? Dignified dependency means designing inheritances that enable growth, choice, and contribution rather than mere consumption. It might mean conditional provisions that encourage development, structures that teach financial responsibility, or trusts designed to support meaningful work rather than idle wealth-holding. The rational approach rejects both callous abandonment of dependents and patronizing control over their lives. Instead, it creates frameworks where inherited security enables people to live according to reason and pursue their own dignified participation in economic and social life. This transforms inheritance from burden or blessing into an ethical practice of care.
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