CARMINE GORGA is engaged in a complex program of interdisciplinary research that he likes to call Relationalism and in the application of findings in his community, Gloucester, MA. The dismal science of economics is transformed into Concordian economics and put in relation with all other intellectual subjects, from political science to theory of justice, through mathematics and logic. For details, please visit www.carmine-gorga.us.In about forty years of working with experts at the highest levels of academia and community groups, he has been especially instrumental in preserving the public transportation system on Cape Ann (CATA), creating the Gloucester Fishermen's Wives Association (GFWA), establishing the Society for the encouragement of the Arts (seArts) and introducing fresh fish into the national supermarkets.A former Fulbright scholar, he has a Ph.D.
in Political Science from the University of Naples, Italy. He is most proud of these two publications: The Economic Process: An Instantaneous Non-Newtonian Picture. Lanham, Md. and Oxford: University Press of America, 2002. And "Toward the Definition of Economic Rights," The Journal of Markets and Morality, Spring 1999, II (1) 88-101. These two publications give the specific technical details that open the road to Concordian economics.