A history of how corporate innovation has shaped society, from ancient
Rome to Silicon Valley
From legacy manufacturers to emerging tech giants, corporations wield
significant power over our lives, our economy, and our politics. Some
celebrate them as engines of progress and prosperity. Others argue that
they recklessly pursue profit at the expense of us all.
In For Profit, law professor William Magnuson reveals that both
visions contain an element of truth. The story of the corporation is a
human story, about a diverse group of merchants, bankers, and investors
that have over time come to shape the landscape of our modern economy.
Its central characters include both the brave, powerful, and ingenious
and the conniving, fraudulent, and vicious. At times, these characters
have been one and the same.
Yet as Magnuson shows, while corporations haven't always behaved
admirably, their purpose is a noble one. From their beginnings in the
Roman Republic, corporations have been designed to promote the common
good. By recapturing this spirit of civic virtue, For Profit argues,
corporations can help craft a society in which all of us--not just
shareholders--benefit from the profits of enterprise.