Adam Smith

by Adam Smith

Published 10 March 1998
This collection of essays explores the literature of Adam Smith, not in his allotted role as the father of modern economics, but focussing on his work as a moral philosopher. Smith's philosophy is a less than straight-forward concept. His "Theory of Moral Sentiments" suggests that sympathy was natural to man, while his "Wealth of Nations" worked out a grand socio-economic theory on the assumption that human nature essentially was self-interested. This seems contradictory, and the essays presented here explore how, like his contemporaries, Smith had a much broader idea of philosophy, and these two works represented part of a much larger whole. The book provides a background to the essays, outlining a few major themes from Smith's literature, the essays reflecting more the current state of Smith scholarship than a historical collection.