Speech on Economical Reform
Edmund Burke
Burke saw wealth as a finite resource, a view shaped by the economic volatility of 18th-century Britain. This was a time when the rise of industrial capitalism was beginning to test old assumptions about wealth and its limits. Frugality, for Burke, was not merely a personal virtue but a societal necessity, ensuring that wealth benefited both present and future generations. This contrasts sharply with modern consumerism, which often treats resources as boundless.