Carmine Gorga

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Born (1935-12-08) December 8, 1935 (age 90)
School or traditionAristotelian/Aquinian economics
Carmine Gorga
Born (1935-12-08) December 8, 1935 (age 90)
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Naples
InfluencesJ. M. Keynes, Franco Modigliani, Joseph Kaipayil
Academic work
School or traditionAristotelian/Aquinian economics
Notable ideasRelationalism

Carmine Gorga (born December 8, 1935) is an Italian political scientist naturalized American working as President of The Somist Institute.[1]

Education and scholarship

Born in Roccadaspide (Salerno), during the great depression in Southern Italy.[citation needed] He was born on December 8, 1935.[citation needed] Came to the United States in 1965.[citation needed] Gorga left Italy to continue his study of The Political Thought of Louis D. Brandeis,[2] the subject of his PhD dissertation at the University of Naples[3] in 1959. This work earned him a Council of Europe Scholarship[4] that led him to the Bologna Center of the Johns Hopkins’ School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in 1961 and the following year, thanks to a Fulbright Scholarship, to the Johns Hopkins’ SAIS in Washington, DC, where he received an MA in International Relations. Among other positions, he is currently the president of The Somist Institute.[5] He married Joan R. Mohr in 1969; they have one son, Jonathan. He is a Third Order Carmelite.

Gorga received many scholarships in addition to the Council of Europe Scholarship and scholarship from Johns Hopkins which brought him to America for study.[6] Carmine Gorga earned his Ph.D. in political science at the University of Naples, Italy in 1959 and earned a diploma in International Relations, Bologna Center of the Johns Hopkins University in 1961. He also earned an MA in International Relations from Johns Hopkins' School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington, D.C., 1962.[7]

Gorga's scholarly papers and 2002 book, "The Economic Process: An Instantaneous Non-Newtonian Picture," challenged the linear world of economics by introducing concepts of relational analysis and interdisciplinary collaboration which he calls Concordian Economics.

Books

See also

References

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