The Mystery of Money – Beyond Greed and Scarcity | Bernard Lietaer (2002)

Bernard Lietaer’s The Mystery of Money: Beyond Greed and Scarcity reframes money not merely as an economic instrument but as a profound cultural, psychological, and archetypal force shaping human societies and collective emotions. Drawing from archetypal psychology, anthropology, history, and systems theory, Lietaer explores how money functions as an unconscious agreement encoded with deep emotional patterns—particularly those linked to the repression of the Great Mother archetype, which manifests collectively as cycles of greed and fear of scarcity. By integrating Ken Wilber’s four-quadrant epistemology with Jungian archetypes, the book reveals how monetary systems both reflect and perpetuate collective shadows, influencing behaviors, social norms, and even spiritual narratives. Through historical case studies — from ancient Egypt to medieval Europe — and analyses of contemporary crises, Lietaer demonstrates that our current scarcity-based monetary paradigm is neither inevitable nor natural but the result of historically contingent choices. He advocates for a conscious redesign of money systems, highlighting complementary currencies, demurrage models, and community-based innovations as pathways to ecological sustainability, social cohesion, and a more balanced integration of masculine and feminine energies. The book invites readers to confront money’s hidden taboos and reclaim agency over one of society’s most powerful collective agreements.

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