ABSTRACT

This volume features 19 original chapters on Adam Smith’s conception of modernity. The contributions demonstrate the relevance of Smith as the great interpreter of modernity 250 years after the publication of The Wealth of Nations.

The chapters in Part 1 focus on structural aspects of Smith’s work. They cover topics such as Smith as the theorist of a spontaneous order, the systematic dimension of Smith’s theoretical construction, and Smith’s role as a historian of economic thought. Part 2 addresses Smith’s conception of modern subjectivity between Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles-Lettres, Theory of Moral Sentiments, and Wealth of Nations. Here the contributors consider the figure of the Smithian "merchant" and the importance of ridicule and satire for understanding modern civility, and comment on the role of sympathy, imagination, and moral judgement in developing a sense of self, the condition of the modern man in society, and the virtue of self-command. Part 3 focuses on the crucial question of the relationship between ethics and economics discussing the link between efficiency, equity and justice, the nature of Smith's theory of value, and the ethical connotation of Smith's critique. Part 4 deals with topics inherent to the functional dynamics and development process of the Smithian "commercial society." These topics include law and authority, the relationship between work and freedom, the parable of the "poor man's son," and the economic and political consequences of the new secular orthodoxy. Finally, the chapters in Part 5 explore themes related to history and the Smithian idea of progress. They focus on the link between trade and progress of civilization, Smith’s modern sociological vision of mass commercial societies, Smith's judgement on “savage” and premodern societies, and the controversial question of the immanentistic or providentialist perspective from which Smith considers both the social dynamics and the historical process.

Adam Smith and Modernity will appeal to scholars and advanced students on 18th-century philosophy, the history of economic thought, and the history of social and political philosophy.

part |47 pages

The order of discourse

chapter 1|15 pages

Adam Smith and spontaneous order

ByCraig Smith

chapter 2|17 pages

Systems, love of system and modernity

ByJean-Daniel Boyer

chapter 3|13 pages

Adam Smith as a historian of economic thought

ByFritz Söllner

part |95 pages

The virtues of modern man

chapter 4|17 pages

Adam Smith on self-command

Utility, dignity, and sympathy
ByRyan Patrick Hanley

chapter 5|21 pages

The joke is not funny anymore

Irony, laughter and ridicule in Adam Smith 1
BySpyridon Tegos

chapter 6|20 pages

Smith and Hume on imagination and sympathy

ByStefano Fiori

chapter 7|19 pages

Adam Smith and the creative role of imagination

ByKeith Hankins, Brennan McDavid

chapter 8|16 pages

Adam Smith on natural education and moral conscience

ByRiccardo Bonfiglioli

part |66 pages

Ethics and economics

chapter 9|14 pages

Adam Smith and a theory of just efficiency

ByMaría Alejandra Carrasco, Maria Pia Paganelli

chapter 10|14 pages

The ego-alter-tertius paradigm

Adam Smith's interaction model
ByEleonore Kalisch

chapter 12|18 pages

Endogenous ethics

Smith's real contribution to the Enlightenment
ByAmos Witztum

part |56 pages

Theory and critique of commercial society

chapter 13|18 pages

The poor man's son

Deception in Adam Smith's case for free enterprise
ByJames R. Otteson

chapter 14|18 pages

Whose Adam Smith? The limits of law's action

ByAgustín José Menéndez

chapter 15|18 pages

Work and freedom in Adam Smith

Limits of historical experience
ByMaria Luisa Pesante

part |75 pages

The problem of history

chapter 17|17 pages

Specialization and commercial modernity

Adam Smith as sociologist
ByLisa Hill

chapter 19|17 pages

On the nature and causes of trade and the progress of civilization

ByLeonidas Montes