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Adam Smith
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Adam Smith

An Enlightened Life

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Editorial Rating

8

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  • Innovative

Recommendation

No other book is as closely identified in the public mind with capitalism and free markets as Adam Smith’s classic, Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. Published in 1776, The Wealth of Nations – with its imagery of an “invisible hand” at work moving markets – confirmed this quiet bachelor professor’s reputation as the pre-eminent thinker of his time. The modern era sees Smith as the patron saint of fiscal conservatism, but his worldview went far beyond the foundations of economics. He believed human beings could advance in all aspects of society to attain lives of freedom, choice and respect. And he saw the potential embodiment of his dreams in a new country called the United States of America. Historian Nicholas Phillipson’s “intellectual biography” of Smith delves into his prolific work and meagerly documented life, starting with his childhood as a widow’s son in a small Scottish town. The result is a dense, scholarly book that presumes a reader’s grounding in 18th-century philosophical history. Though it’s hardly a breezy read, getAbstract recommends Phillipson’s work, which notably clarifies Smith’s role as a catalyst for political and economic change in a turbulent era.

Summary

“A Private and Self-Sufficient Man”

Adam Smith left little of himself for future generations to know. Three years before his death at age 67, he asked his friends to destroy most of his written work, including lecture notes and manuscripts. His books survive, along with papers and notes his students had saved, but little else. Similarly, little of his personal correspondence exists; he simply didn’t like to write letters. History offers no paintings or drawings of his countenance, only two medallions struck during his later years. He shunned the social whirl of London for the relative anonymity of life as a bachelor professor living with his mother in Scotland.

Smith only began to acquire fame in 1776, when he published his classic, Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, the second of four masterworks he planned on the “Science of Man.” Basing his concepts on the leading philosophers of antiquity and of his own time, Smith set out to create a rational study of human beings and their roles in the societies they build.

His first book, The Theory of Moral Sentiments, published in 1759, dealt with how people define their lives...

About the Author

Nicholas Phillipson, an expert on the Scottish Enlightenment, is a Fellow in History at Edinburgh University.


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