Correcting Europe's political economy: The virtuous eclecticism of Georg Ludwig Schmid
In: History of European ideas, Band 33, Heft 4, S. 390-410
ISSN: 0191-6599
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In: History of European ideas, Band 33, Heft 4, S. 390-410
ISSN: 0191-6599
In: History of European ideas, Band 33, Heft 4, S. 390-410
ISSN: 0191-6599
In: Political studies: the journal of the Political Studies Association of the United Kingdom, Band 42, Heft 1_suppl, S. 166-231
ISSN: 1467-9248
It is said that the people are sovereign; but over whom? – over themselves, apparently. The people are thus subject. There is surely something equivocal if not erroneous here, for the people which command are not the people which obey. It is enough, then, to put the general proposition, 'The people are sovereign', to feel that it needs an exegesis…. The people, it will be said, exercise their sovereignty by means of their representatives. This begins to make sense. The people are the sovereign which cannot exercise sovereignty… (Joseph De Maistre, Study on Sovereignty) Someone was speaking to Sieyès of the scorn that his detractors continually affect for what they call 'grand theories'. 'Theories', he said, 'are the practice of centuries; all their practices are the theory of the passing moment! (Pierre Louis Roederer)1
In: Political theory: an international journal of political philosophy, Band 22, Heft 2, S. 339-343
ISSN: 1552-7476
In: Political studies, Band 42, S. 166-231
ISSN: 0032-3217
Wealth and Virtue reassesses the remarkable contribution of the Scottish Enlightenment to the formation of modern economics and to theories of capitalism. Its unique range indicates the scope of the Scottish intellectual achievement of the eighteenth century and explores the process by which the boundaries between economic thought, jurisprudence, moral philosophy and theoretical history came to be established. Dealing not only with major figures like Hume and Smith, there are also studies of lesser known thinkers like Andrew Fletcher, Gershom Carmichael, Lord Kames and John Millar as well as of Locke in the light of eighteenth century social theory, the intellectual culture of the University of Edinburgh in the middle of the eighteenth century and of the performance of the Scottish economy on the eve of the publication of the Wealth of Nations. While the scholarly emphasis is on the rigorous historical reconstruction of both theory and context, Wealth and Virtue directly addresses itself to modern political theorists and economists and throws light on a number of major focal points of controversy in legal and political philosophy
In: Political theory: an international journal of political philosophy, Band 22, Heft 2, S. 339-343
ISSN: 0090-5917
"Scholars normally emphasize the contrast between the two great eighteenth-century thinkers Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Adam Smith. Rousseau is seen as a critic of modernity; Smith as an apologist. However, Istvan Hont finds significant commonalities in their work, arguing that both were theorists of commercial society but from different perspectives. In making his case, Hont begins with the concept of commercial society and explains why that concept has much in common with what the German philosopher Immanuel Kant called unsocial sociability. This is why many earlier scholars used to refer to an Adam Smith Problem and, in a somewhat different way, to a Jean-Jacques Rousseau Problem. The two problems--and the questions about the relationship between individualism and altruism that they raised--were, in fact, more similar than has usually been thought because both arose from the more fundamental problems generated by thinking about morality and politics in a commercial society. Commerce entails reciprocity, but a commercial society also entails involuntary social interdependence, relentless economic competition, and intermittent interstate rivalry. This was the world to which Rousseau and Smith belonged, and Politics in Commercial Society is an account of how they thought about it."--
In: The economic history review, Band 37, Heft 3, S. 437
ISSN: 1468-0289