Author Archives: F. E. Guerra-Pujol

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About F. E. Guerra-Pujol

When I’m not blogging, I am a business law professor at the University of Central Florida.

Monday music: Areia Branca

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Adam Smith in Switzerland

… there remain opportunities, even at this late date, for remedying the present meagre knowledge of Adam Smith’s life. [W. R. Scott, “Studies relating to Adam Smith in the last fifty years”, Proceedings of the British Academy (1940), Appendix II, … Continue reading

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A conjecture re: Adam Smith and the duchesse d’Enville

Who was the duchesse d’Enville, and what was Adam Smith’s relation to her? Today, Alain Alcouffe and I wish to conclude our series by bringing to your attention an additional primary source that may — or may not — shed … Continue reading

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Abbé Colbert on Adam Smith and the Duchesse d’Enville

Who was the duchesse d’Enville, and what was Adam Smith’s relation to her? Thus far this week, Alain Alcouffe and I have explored this enigmatic relationship by surveying the secondary literature on Smith. But of all the works we have … Continue reading

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John Rae and Dugald Stewart on Adam Smith and the Duchesse d’Enville

Who was the Duchesse d’Enville, and what was Adam Smith’s relation to her? Among other things, according to Smith’s biographer John Rae, she “was a woman of great ability”, a “devoted friend of Turgot”, as well as a highly-educated and … Continue reading

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Ross on Adam Smith and the Duchesse d’Enville

Who was the duchesse d’Enville, and what was Adam Smith’s relation to her? The one scholar who has the most to say about these enigmas is the late great historian Ian Simpson Ross. [See I. S. Ross, The Life of … Continue reading

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Bonnyman on Adam Smith and the Duchesse d’Enville

Who was the duchesse d’Enville, and what was Adam Smith’s relation to her? In his excellent contribution to the secondary literature on the Scottish philosopher-economist [see “Adam Smith in Geneva” in Valérie Cossy, Béla Kapossy, & Richard Whatmore, editors, Genève, … Continue reading

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Epiphany

Today, 6 January, not only marks the end of my fall sabbatical and my return to teaching; it is also Three Kings Day — the feast day of the Epiphany! (PS: The word “epiphany” is derived from the Greek ἐπιφάνεια, … Continue reading

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Sunday song: *Bemba Colorá*

Why not celebrate the end of Christmastide — as well as the end of my sabbatical — with a classic Cuban anthem performed by Sheila E., featuring Gloria Estefan & Mimy Succar?

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My Christmastide readings

Among other things, I have been reading James McPherson’s biography of Abraham Lincoln; Amos Towles’ beautiful historical fiction novel A Gentleman in Moscow; Ian Johnston’s translation of Ovid’s Metamorphoses; and Stephen Greenblatt’s The Swerve: How the World Became Modern, an … Continue reading

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