The concept that humans need sufficient resources for dignity and flourishing, but beyond this threshold, additional wealth contributes little to wellbeing while depriving others of necessities.
Yacob believed reason reveals what humans genuinely need: food, shelter, education, health, dignity, and opportunity. Beyond meeting these needs, additional wealth yields diminishing returns for individual wellbeing while resources remain scarce for others. A billionaire's thousandth mansion provides negligible happiness compared to what that money could provide—housing, medicine, education—to someone lacking basics. This concept challenges unlimited accumulation by establishing what 'enough' actually means. Reason and evidence show that beyond a certain threshold, additional money doesn't improve life satisfaction meaningfully. Yet the extremely wealthy continue accumulating. Yacob's framework would question this psychologically: Are they driven by genuine need or by other impulses—status-seeking, insecurity, addiction to growth? The sufficiency principle suggests that ethical wealth involves meeting needs generously but then redirecting surplus toward others' flourishing. This isn't about everyone being equal, but about recognizing that extreme concentration of resources beyond any reasonable sufficiency threshold is ethically indefensible when others lack necessities.
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