A History of Scottish Economic Thought
In: The Routledge History of Economic Thought Series
In: The Routledge History of Economic Thought Series
In: Routledge history of economic thought
Introduction / Alexander Dow and Sheila Dow -- John Law and the Scottish Enlightenment / Antoin Murphy -- Francis Hutcheson / Andrew Skinner -- David Hume as a political economist / Carl Wennerlind -- Sir James Steuart, Principles of political oeconomy / Andrew Skinner -- Adam Smith, real Newtonian / Leonidas Montes -- Adam Smith, common sense and aesthetics in the age of experiments / Flavio Comim -- James Mill as economist, theory dominated by deductive method / Thomas Torrance -- John Ramsay McCulloch / D.P. O'Brien -- The place of Thomas Chalmers in Scottish political economy / A.M.C. Waterman -- John Rae / Douglas Mair -- Economics in the Scottish universities from the late nineteenth century / Alexander Dow and Alan Hutton -- Applied economics in the twentieth century / Alan Hutton -- Postscript / Sheila Dow.
In: The Routledge History of Economic Thought
Modern economics has, at its foundation, scholarly contributions from many prominent Scottish thinkers. This revealing work examines the roots of this great tradition, places in perspective a selection of authors, and assesses their contribution over three centuries in the light of a distinctive Scottish approach to economics. Scottish Enlightenment is an established area of research interest, and this volume offers new scholarship on key Enlightenment figures whilst placing emphasis on their approach to economic thought. Smith and Hume are key, but other less familiar, yet important authors are also investigated here, including a murderer, a revolutionary, a medical practitioner and a novelist (John Law, Sir James Stuart, John Rae and Shield Nicholson, respectively). The latest in a prestigious series charting national traditions in the history of economic thought, this important book, an essential read for scholars of economic thought, features contributions from such major historians of economic thought as Andrew Skinner and Antoin Murphy.