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Ted Malloch Quotes

Ted Malloch Quotes
1.
Profitability is the consequence of doing business in the right way, to honor God.
Ted Malloch

2.
Capitalism is about the mutual creation of wealth rather than the pillaging of it.
Ted Malloch

3.
Leadership, in other words, is a matter of character, not goals.
Ted Malloch

4.
Discipline is the virtue that begins in obedience and flowers in self-control.
Ted Malloch

5.
The moral sentiments that constrain economic life also promote it.
Ted Malloch

Similar Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson William Shakespeare Donald Trump Mahatma Gandhi Barack Obama Rush Limbaugh Henry David Thoreau Friedrich Nietzsche Mark Twain Rajneesh Cassandra Clare C. S. Lewis Albert Einstein Oscar Wilde Thomas Jefferson
6.
When people freely identify with their work and find themselves through it, excellence follows.
Ted Malloch

7.
Spiritual entrepreneurship is the unsung route to growth in the modern economy.
Ted Malloch

8.
Courage... is not a selfish attribute: it is only possible if you are pursuing a wider and more worthy goal.
Ted Malloch

Quote Topics by Ted Malloch: Goal Spiritual Economic Moral Selfish Long Excellence Technology Enemy Creation Imagination Benefits Three Valuable Needs Creativity Principles Entrepreneurship Conflict Wells Growth Treatment Depends Running Flower Profitability Competition Utility Way Discipline
9.
Taking faith seriously leads to the utility of altruistic behavior.
Ted Malloch

10.
Business is the real test of the moral life.
Ted Malloch

11.
Caring for God's endowment in a thrifty fashion is a form of biblical obedience.
Ted Malloch

12.
Attempts to secure an equal outcome always require unequal treatment of individuals.
Ted Malloch

13.
When all benefits are promised by the state, nobody need feel grateful for them.
Ted Malloch

14.
In the new conditions created by the global economy, the information revolution and the growth of smart technologies, it is more necessary than ever for all companies to be guided by their rich spiritual inheritance, as spiritual enterprises.
Ted Malloch

15.
There's such a thing as spiritual capital that has economic function and potential.
Ted Malloch

16.
We prepare for success by acquiring virtues.
Ted Malloch

17.
The business virtue par excellence is honesty without it markets can't long survive.
Ted Malloch

18.
Adam Smith's image of competition in the marketplace was intended as an adjunct to his detailed description of human motivation in The Theory of Moral Sentiments , in which the pursuit of profit is tempered at every juncture by sympathy and benevolence, and by the posture of the "impartial spectator" which is forced on us by our moral nature.
Ted Malloch

19.
One runs a business ultimately to do well so you can do good for everyone.
Ted Malloch

20.
Profit doesn't appear as the goal but as a side effect of pursuing motivating principles.
Ted Malloch

21.
Success comes because you have found your ecological niche and can flourish by doing your own valuable thing.
Ted Malloch

22.
Faith engenders courage; and also requires it.
Ted Malloch

23.
An exercise of moral imagination helps companies further goals of its members.
Ted Malloch

24.
Perhaps the most eloquent of the hard virtues is courage, the disposition to encounter adversity head-on and strive to overcome it.
Ted Malloch

25.
Long-term success depends upon trust.
Ted Malloch

26.
Myth: There's conflict between selfish free markets and a benevolent world of human sympathy.
Ted Malloch

27.
The laws of economic life are subject to the eternal laws of spiritual capital.
Ted Malloch

28.
Three cardinal virtues of business: creativity, building community, practical realism.
Ted Malloch

29.
The free economy is not the enemy but the friend of social capital.
Ted Malloch