Adam Smith's Marketplace of Life

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2002-10-28
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
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Summary

Adam Smith wrote two books, one about economics and the other about morality. His Wealth of Nations argues for a largely free-market economy, while his Theory of Moral Sentiments argues that human morality develops out of a mutual sympathy that people seek with one another. How do these books go together? How do markets and morality mix? James Otteson provides a comprehensive examination and interpretation of Smith's moral theory and shows how his conception of the nature of morality applies to his understanding of markets, language and other social institutions. Considering Smith's notions of natural sympathy, the impartial spectator, human nature, and human conscience the author also addresses the issue of whether Smith thinks that moral judgments enjoy a transcendent sanction. James Otteson sees Smith's theory of morality as an institution that develops unintentionally but nevertheless in an orderly way according to a market model.

Table of Contents

Preface ix
Abbreviations xiii
Introduction 1(12)
Adam Smith's Moral Theory, Part One: Sympathy and the Impartial Spectator Procedure
13(52)
Adam Smith's Moral Theory, Part Two: Conscience and Human Nature
65(36)
The Marketplace of Morality
101(33)
The ``Adam Smith Problem''
134(36)
The Market Model and the Familiarity Principle: Solving the ``Adam Smith Problem''
170(29)
Justifying Smithian Moral Standards
199(59)
The Unintended Order of Human Social Life: Language, Marketplaces, and Morality
258(32)
Conclusion 290(35)
Bibliography 325(8)
Index 333

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