Adam Smith: An Enlightened LifeThis fascinating intellectual biography of Adam Smith dramatically rewrites the economist’s life and offers new insight into his iconic concepts The great eighteenth-century British economist Adam Smith (1723–90) is celebrated as the founder of modern economics. Yet Smith saw himself primarily as a philosopher rather than an economist and would never have predicted that the ideas for which he is now best known were his most important. This biography shows the extent to which Smith's great works, The Wealth of Nations and The Theory of Moral Sentiments, were part of one of the most ambitious projects of the Euruopean Enlightenment, a grand “Science of Man" that would encompass law, history, and aesthetics as well as economics and ethics, and which was only half complete on Smith’s death in 1790.Nick Phillipson reconstructs Smith’s intellectual ancestry and shows what Smith took from, and what he gave to, in the rapidly changing intellectual and commercial cultures of Glasgow and Edinburgh as they entered the great years of the Scottish Enlightenment. Above all he explains how far Smith’s ideas developed in dialogue with those of his closest friend, the other titan of the age, David Hume. |
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Page 1700
... Lord Kames, portrait by David Martin. (Scottish National Portrait Gallery) 12. Etienne Bonnot de Condillac, engraving by G. Volpato. (Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris/The Bridgeman Art Library) 13. Charles Louis de Secondat, Baron de ...
... Lord Kames, portrait by David Martin. (Scottish National Portrait Gallery) 12. Etienne Bonnot de Condillac, engraving by G. Volpato. (Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris/The Bridgeman Art Library) 13. Charles Louis de Secondat, Baron de ...
Page 1701
... Lord Rockville, Dr Adam Smith and Commissioner Brown', by John Kay, fromA Series of Original Portraits and Character Etchings (Edinburgh, 1842). (University of Edinburgh) 29. Adam Smith's grave, Canongate Graveyard, Edinburgh. (Royal ...
... Lord Rockville, Dr Adam Smith and Commissioner Brown', by John Kay, fromA Series of Original Portraits and Character Etchings (Edinburgh, 1842). (University of Edinburgh) 29. Adam Smith's grave, Canongate Graveyard, Edinburgh. (Royal ...
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... lords were importing more tobacco than London and all the English outports combined. The key to the Glaswegians' success in the tobacco trade lay in the simple fact that they concentrated on small planters with whom they could deal ...
... lords were importing more tobacco than London and all the English outports combined. The key to the Glaswegians' success in the tobacco trade lay in the simple fact that they concentrated on small planters with whom they could deal ...
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... lords had intermarried and had turned themselves into large, wellintegrated syndicates with their own rules and ... lord and that the merchant oligarchy went out of its way to make sure that the city kept on the friendliest terms ...
... lords had intermarried and had turned themselves into large, wellintegrated syndicates with their own rules and ... lord and that the merchant oligarchy went out of its way to make sure that the city kept on the friendliest terms ...
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... lords of Glasgow.6 Glasgow's economic growth was so spectacular that it has virtually monopolized the attention of historians to the exclusion of its Presbyterian pietism, the other remarkable fact of its eighteenth-century history. One ...
... lords of Glasgow.6 Glasgow's economic growth was so spectacular that it has virtually monopolized the attention of historians to the exclusion of its Presbyterian pietism, the other remarkable fact of its eighteenth-century history. One ...
Contents
1699 | |
1703 | |
1707 | |
1717 | |
1737 | |
4Edinburghs Early Enlightenment | |
a Conjectural History | |
9Smith and the Duke of Buccleuchin Europe 17646 | |
10London Kirkcaldy and the Making of theWealth of Nations 176676 | |
11The Wealth of Nations andSmiths Very violent attack upon the whole commercialsystem of Great Britain | |
12Humes Death | |
13Last Years in Edinburgh 177890 | |
Epilogue | |
Notes and Sources | |
Bibliography of Works Cited | |
6Professor of Moral Philosophyat Glasgow 1 17519 | |
7The Theory of Moral Sentimentsand the Civilizing Powersof Commerce | |
8Professor of Moral Philosophyat Glasgow 2 175963 | |
Index | |
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Adam Smith agriculture Boswell Bridgeman Art Library Buccleuch Cambridge career century citizens city’s commerce contemporary Corr culture curriculum David Hume depended develop discussion division of labour Dugald Stewart Duke économistes Edinburgh edition Epictetus Essays ethical finance find first France Francis Hutcheson friends Glasgow govemment Henry Home human nature Hume’s Humean impartial spectator important improvement influence intellectual interest James Boswell jurisprudence justice Kirkcaldy language leamed lectures on rhetoric letter liberty literary live London Lord Mandeville manufactures merchants modem Montesquieu moral philosophy Moral Sentiments ofthe Oswald Oxford passions political economy Presbyterian principles Professor progress of opulence published Pufendorf Quesnay Quesnay’s reflect Ross Rousseau Scotland Scots Scottish Enlightenment sense significant sociability society teaching Theory of Moral thinking thought Tobacco Lords town Townshend trade understanding Union virtue Wealth of Nations William writing