After a full day of panels at this year’s Adam Smith conference in Glasgow, I will be watching the Group C match between Scotland and Morocco at Boteco do Brasil in the Merchant City tonight.

After a full day of panels at this year’s Adam Smith conference in Glasgow, I will be watching the Group C match between Scotland and Morocco at Boteco do Brasil in the Merchant City tonight.

This time around, the weather in Glasgow is cold (by Florida standards) and rainy, so I am reblogging some pictures from my 2023 visit to Glesga, Scotland’s friendliest city.
I will be attending a joint meeting of British Academy and the International Adam Smith Society (IASS) on “The World in 1776/2026: The Wealth of Nations at 250″ at the University of Glasgow (pictured below) for the remainder of this week. Among other things, I will be presenting my work-in-progress (with Alain Alcouffe) on Adam Smith’s intellectual encounters in Geneva in late 1765-early 1766 as well as my forthcoming book (with Salim Rashid) Beyond the Adam Smith Problem: Ethics, Economics, and Society. The full program of this week’s Adam Smith conference is available here.
During my brief stint in London this week (I am now en route to Glasgow by train), I was able to visit the Wallace Collection to see a special exhibition featuring more than 50 original works of art painted by Sir Winston Churchill, the first major retrospective of Churchill’s paintings since his death. More details are available here and here. Update (11:00 pm GMT): I did some digging and discovered that the future prime minister wrote an essay “Painting as pastime” in the early 1920s. What began as a mere hobby, however, became a pursuit of passion over the course of Churchill’s momentous life. Bonus link: the Wallace Collection’s Winston Churchill: The Painter exhibition catalogue (pictured below) is available here.

To commemorate the 250th anniversary of the publication of Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations, I have been featuring each of the sections of Smith’s magnum opus on my blog. Below, for example, is a compilation of my previous blog posts on Book IV of The Wealth of Nations:
In all, I wrote up 21 separate blog posts on this part of Smith’s treatise between 9 February and 5 March of this year. (See also here, here, and here for compilations of my previous posts on Books I to III of The Wealth of Nations.) Bonus link: You can order an “Adam Smith Wealth of Nations Great Books Graphic T-Shirt” (see below) here, via Liberty Maniacs.
That is the title of this beautiful novella by Mark Richard Robinson, who I had the honor of befriending in Broxbourne, England, these past few days. Update (3:00 pm GMT): I have now finished reading the good Reverend Robinson’s poignant and pensive work of autobiographical fiction. He not only addresses an important philosophical question — the relationship between faith and belief — his work is also a modern-day sequel to two of Seneca’s most timeless essays: “On the Shortness of Life” and “On Providence“. (As a literary aside, I would also have loved to read Robinson’s story from the perspective of his adulterous colleague!)
As a follow-up to my previous two posts (see here and here), I want to pose another question to my fellow admirers and students of Adam Smith, another fundamental “Adam Smith problem,” so to speak. In Book III of The Wealth of Nations, Smith traces the progress and prosperity of Europe from the fall of the Roman Empire, and he notices a broad but inexorable historical pattern: the presence of law and liberty in urban areas and the absence of law or liberty in rural areas, or in the immortal words of Adam Smith, “Order and good government, and along with them them liberty and security of individuals, were … established in cities at a time when the occupiers of land in the country were exposed to every sort of violence.”
For Smith, in short, European cities became prosperous because of two key ingredients: law and liberty, both of which combine to produce economic prosperity. Although my own view is that Smith’s historical conclusion is correct, we must now consider a causal question in addition to the delicate line-drawing question I posed in my previous post. Simply put, what if the arrow of causality is the other way around? What if economic prosperity produces some combination of law and liberty? Or in the alternative, what if it’s another independent variable — say, something like “culture” — that is doing all the causal work?

Continuing with my series of blog posts commemorating the 250th anniversary of the publication of Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations, below is a compilation of my previous blog posts on Book III of Smith’s magnum opus. (Nota bene: Book III is the shortest part of Smith’s treatise, so I was able to cover this ground in just four posts.)

Following up on my previous post, I want to share two major Smithian themes from my rereading of Book 2 of The Wealth of Nations as well as pose a question to students of Adam Smith:

Hopefully It’s Interesting.
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