Conscious Capitalism, as stated, 2000s-present
Contemporary · stated scope
Conscious Capitalism is a business philosophy and movement that holds that corporations should operate with purposes beyond profit, attending to the interests of all stakeholders including employees, customers, suppliers, communities, and the environment. It was developed in the United States in the 2000s, with the nonprofit organization Conscious Capitalism, Inc. formally established in 2010, and is associated with the work of John Mackey and Raj Sisodia, including their 2013 book of the same name.
Cluster:Pragmatic Achievement
Defined by elevated Evidence-Based Reasoning, with Achievement & Excellence, Material Aspiration, and Progress & Innovation running high alongside it. Sanctity & Transcendence and Tradition & Continuity sit low. The pattern is secular and outcome-focused: performance and evidence over inherited forms.
Full profile
All 22 dimensions in one fixed order, grouped by the contrast axis each feeds, so any two entities can be read side by side. Switch to “By axis” to group them by the axis each feeds.
Neighbors
- 1Stakeholder Capitalism, as stated, 1970s-presentDistance: 11Compare
- 2Al Jazeera, as realized, 2015-presentDistance: 14Compare
- 3Declaration of Independence, as stated, 1776Distance: 14Compare
- 4Digital Privacy Movement, as realized, 1990s-presentDistance: 15Compare
- 5Open Source Movement, as realized, 1980s-presentDistance: 15Compare
The Three Axes (Detail)
Each bar is one pole’s pull, pointing the way it pushes the result. The dot is where the two pulls add up.