Avarice in a sentence as a noun

What is the solution to the gravity of human avarice?

But what ever happened to unenlightened self-interest, naked greed, and pure avarice?

I can see being a greedy **** for a couple decades, while you're still unsure if you are, in fact, going to become and remain wealthy beyond the dreams of avarice.

Never attribute to incompetence that which is adequately explained by avarice.

Also, their job performance correlates with their own avarice; what's rarer than a good account manager is a good account manager who's in it for love not money.

In a culture that relentlessly promotes avarice and excess as the good life, a person happy doing his own work is usually considered an eccentric, if not a subversive.

Thousands of talented engineers could not negotiate, switch companies and adapt because the disgusting avarice of the former CEO of Apple prevented them from doing so.

This is an incredibly astute observation, although I've seen the most flagrant forms of cheating/avarice from Indian and Asian students who are simply trying to avoid studying.

There are many definite methods, honest and dishonest, which make people rich; the only "instinct" I know of which does it is that instinct which theological Christianity crudely describes as "the sin of avarice.

This, I suspect, is what encourages the "rock star" model, which says that if you have some modicum of programming skill, the right idea, the right attitude and a bit of luck, then you too could become rich beyond the dreams of avarice.

The "problems" they "solve" are chosen for their profitability, and the rhetoric about utility is just a way to colonize the discourse and deflect attention from the obvious avarice of it all.

It is often pride, emulation, avarice, malice - all the odious qualities - which drive a man to complete, elaborate, refine, destroy, and renew his work until he has made something that gratifies his pride and envy and greed.

Who said that the idea that a single human being "can be understood as having a singular motivation such as greed, avarice, lust, pride, jealousy" is not silly?That's an interesting idea but actually I don't think people actually think that way by default.

For it relieves them of the necessity of discriminating between different types of economic activity and different sources of wealth, between enterprise and avarice, energy and unscrupulous greed, property which is legitimate and property which is theft, the just enjoyment of the fruits of labor and the idle parasitism of birth or fortune, because it treats all economic activities as standing upon the same level, and suggests that excess or defect, waste or superfluity, require no conscious effort of the social will to avert them, but are corrected almost automatically by the mechanical play of economic forces.

* the idea that society-wide events happen because they are planned by an entity that is fully conscious of what it is doing* the believe that entities actually exist that could actually reliably orchestrate society-scale things* the idea that society-scale things can be planned at all, which entails that society-scale things can be predicted reliably* the attribution of human characteristics to a vague group* the idea that vague groups can be understood as having a singular consciousness* the idea that vague groups can be understood as having a singular motivation exactly like that of a single human being, such as greed, avarice, lust, pride, jealousyThis type of thinking has been attractive to humanity for the last hundred thousand years or so.

Avarice definitions

noun

reprehensible acquisitiveness; insatiable desire for wealth (personified as one of the deadly sins)

See also: greed covetousness rapacity avaritia

noun

extreme greed for material wealth

See also: avariciousness covetousness cupidity