Adam Smith : an enlightened life

Bibliographic Information

Adam Smith : an enlightened life

Nicholas Phillipson

Yale University Press, 2010

  • : hardback
  • : pbk

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

: hardback ISBN 9780300169270

Description

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. Thisbiography 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."
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9780300177671

Description

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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