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Title Propriety and prosperity : new studies on the philosophy of Adam Smith / [edited by] David Hardwick, Leslie Marsh
Published Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York, NY : Palgrave Macmillan, 2014

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Description 1 online resource
Series Archival insights into the evolution of economics
Archival insights into the evolution of economics.
Contents 1. Introduction; David F. Hardwick and Leslie Marsh -- PART I: CONTEXT -- 2. Adam Smith as a Scottish Philosopher; Gordon Graham -- 3. Friendship in Commercial Society Revisited: Adam Smith on Commercial Friendship; Spyridon Tegos -- 4. Adam Smith and French Political Economy: Parallels and Differences; Laurent Dobuzinskis -- 5. Adam Smith: 18th Century Polymath; Roger Frantz -- PART II: PROPRIETY -- 6. Indulgent Sympathy and the Impartial Spectator; Joshua Rust -- 7. Adam Smith on Sensory Perception: A Sympathetic Account; Brian Glenney -- 8. Adam Smith on Sympathy: From Self-Interest to Empathy; Gloria Z̨︢iga y Postigo -- 9 . What My Dog Can Do: On the Effect of The Wealth of Nations I.ii. 2; Jack Weinstein -- PART III: PROSPERITY -- 10. Metaphor Made Manifest: Taking Seriously Smith's 'Invisible Hand'; Eugene Heath -- 11. The 'Invisible Hand' Phenomenon in Philosophy and Economics; Gavin Kennedy -- 12. Instincts and the Invisible Order: The Possibility of Progress; Jonathan B. Wight -- 13. The Spontaneous Order and the Family; Lauren K. Hall -- 14. Smith, Justice and the Scope of the Political; Craig Smith
Summary This book is a collection of specially commissioned chapters from philosophers, economists and political scientists, focusing on Adam Smith's two main works Theory of Moral Sentiments and Wealth of Nations. It examines the duality which manifests itself as an apparent contradiction: that is, how does one reconcile the view of human nature expounded in Theory of Moral Sentiments (sympathy and benevolence) and the view of human nature expounded in Wealth of Nations (self-interest)? New work by philosophers has uncovered the complex and nuanced connections between Smith's account of economic and moral motivation. His economic theory has presented conceptual challenges: the famous 'invisible hand' has proved an elusive concept much in need of scrutiny. 'Prosperity' in the title captures the economic side of Smith's thought. 'Propriety' points to his ethics. In recent philosophical scholarship two major shifts have occurred. One is that the originality of Smith's moral theory has been rediscovered and recognised. His account of sympathy is significantly different from Hume's: his idea of the 'impartial spectator' is independent, rich and complex and he is alert to the phenomenon of self-deception. The second shift is that Smith's image as an economic liberal has been drastically revised, reclaiming him from current ideological use in defence of free markets and the minimal state. Smith links economics, politics and ethics through notions of justice and utility in subtle ways that make the labels 'economic liberal' and 'laissez-faire theorist' at best inadequate and at worst misleading. This collection was put together with a view to bringing Smith to a mainstream philosophy audience while simultaneously informing Smith's traditional constituency (political economy) with philosophically finessed interpretations
Notes Includes index
Print version record
Subject Smith, Adam, 1723-1790.
SUBJECT Smith, Adam, 1723-1790 fast
Subject Economics -- Philosophy
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Economics -- General.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Reference.
Economics -- Philosophy
Form Electronic book
Author Hardwick, David F. (David Francis), 1934- editor.
Marsh, Leslie, editor
ISBN 9781137321053
1137321059