Google Scholar’s contribution to *Die Adam Smith Probleme*

Alternate title: “Die Adam Smith Probleme, nine honorable mentions”

My work-in-progress “Die Adam Smith Probleme“, which I am now co-authoring with Salim Rashid, surveys a wide variety of unresolved mysteries surrounding the life and work of Adam Smith. As it happens, however, typing the words “another Adam Smith problem” (with the quotation marks) into Google Scholar’s search engine generates only nine results: one book, two book chapters, and six research articles. (Hey, at least nine hits are better than none!) The book is Mike Hill and Warren Montag’s The Other Adam Smith: Popular Contention, Commercial Society, and the Birth of Necro-Economics (Stanford U Press, 2014), which is available here via Amazon, where the authors note: “… the first problem one encounters in writing on Adam Smith is the sheer volume and diversity of extant interpretations [of Smith’s works]”. (See Hill & Warren 2014, p. 7, footnote omitted.) The remaining works — two book chapters and six scholarly papers — are as follows (in alphabetical order, by author):

  1. Lauren Brubaker, “Does the ‘wisdom of nature’ need help”, in Leonidas Montes & Eric Schliesser, editors, New Voices on Adam Smith (Routledge, 2006), pp. 168-192, which is partially available here. Alas, this book chapter citation is a false positive, for Brubaker (2006, p. 177) writes, “I do not claim to have discovered yet another Adam Smith problem”, so we can exclude her work from my collection of Adam Smith problems.
  2. Robert L. Heilbroner, “The socialization of the individual in Adam Smith”, History of Political Economy, Vol. 14, No. 3 (1982), pp. 427-439, available here. Professor Heilbroner’s Adam Smith problem is “the question of whether a virtuous society, not merely a viable one, can be constituted from the socio-psychological premises on which Smith builds both books”, i.e. Theory of Moral Sentiments and Wealth of Nations. See Heilbroner 1982, p. 427. Say what? I have no idea what that quotation even means!
  3. Kwangsu Kim, “New light on Adam Smith’s view of taxation via the concept of equity”, The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought (published online 24 June 2023), pp. 1-24, available here. Again, we have another false positive, for Kim argues — contra the conventional view — that there are, in fact, no inconsistencies in Smith’s four maxims of taxation: equality, certainty, convenience, and economy. Really?
  4. Catherine Labio, “The solution is in the text: a survey of the recent literary turn in Adam Smith studies”, The Adam Smith Review, Vol. 2 (2006), pp. 151-176, the first four pages of which are available here. Sadly, the rest of this 2006 article is gated (seriously?), nor is it available at my university library, so I have requested a copy via an inter-library loan.
  5. Kevin Quinn, “Losing the world: another Adam Smith problem”, Journal of Economics and Politics, Vol. 20, No. 1 (2012), pp. 84-92, available here. Professor Quinn’s Adam Smith problem is “how to reconcile the existence of [human memory and public realm] in the earlier book [Theory of Moral Sentiments] with its disappearance in the latter [Wealth of Nations].” Hmmm.
  6. Hisanori Tsuge, “‘Citizen’ and ‘Man of Virtue’: Another ‘Adam Smith Problem’,” Ethica, Vol. 16 (2023), pp. 27-50, available here (in Japanese). [柘植, 尚則],〈市民〉と〈有徳な人〉 : もう一つの「アダム・スミス問題」, エティカ, 16 (2023), 27-50.] From what I can tell, Prof Tsuge’s Adam Smith problem — what Tsuge refers to as “Problem #2” or とにしたい2 — is the distinction between the “citizen” and the “man of virtue” in the works of Smith; specifically, how does a “citizen” become “virtuous”? Sounds a lot like Heilbroner’s Adam Smith problem.
  7. A. M. C. Waterman, “Is there another, quite different, ‘Adam Smith problem’?”, Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2014), pp. 401-420, available here. In brief, Prof Waterman’s Adam Smith problem is the existence of an “irreconcilable contradiction” in Book 1 of Smith’s Wealth of the Nations, a contradiction between Smith’s description of the division of labor and one of the assumptions of Smith’s theory of price. Okay?
  8. Amos Witztum, “Division of labour, wealth, and behaviour in Adam Smith”, in Pier Luigi Porta, Roberto Scazzieri, & Andrew Skinner, editors, Knowledge, Social Institutions, and the Division of Labour (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2001), pp. 137-152. Unfortunately, this book chapter is not only gated even though it was published over 20 years ago (jeesh!); the obscure book in which it appears is not available at my university library, so I have requested a copy via an inter-library loan.

To sum up, two of the Google Scholar hits are false positives (the papers by Brubaker and Kim), two are gated (the works by Labio and Witzum), while the remaining five works (the book by Hill & Warren and the contributions by Heilbroner, Quinn, Tsuge, and Waterman) present five different “Adam Smith problems” that may merit further investigation. All nine works are new to me, so I will have more to say about them soon — once I obtain complete copies of the two gated articles — and I will also add them to “Die Adam Smith Probleme“.

Google Scholar search tips
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Four additional *Adam Smith problems*

My previous post highlighted an unsolved mystery involving two of the foremost European thinkers of the Age of Enlightenment — Adam Smith and Jean-Jacques Rousseau — an enigma posed by Paul Sagar in his 2022 book Adam Smith Reconsidered. Specifically, what did Smith think of Rousseau, or what influence did Rousseau have on Smith? In addition, by my count Professor Sagar also identifies or mentions at least four more important “Adam Smith problems”:

  1. The ‘real’ Das Adam Smith Problem. First off, Prof Sagar refers to what he calls “the real Das Adam Smith Problem” in the Introduction to his book: “How could a first-rate moral philosopher like Smith think that morality was not fatally compromised by the existence of [commercial society] …,” i.e. the tension between private and public virtue on the one hand and the pursuit of material luxury goods on the other? (See Sagar 2022, p. 3, emphasis in the original.)
  2. Fellow feeling versus the love of domination. Next, Sagar compares and contrasts Smith’s theory of “fellow feeling” with his (Smith’s) realist recognition of man’s love to dominate and enslave other men and then asks, “How can we be both fundamentally disposed towards fellow feeling with each other, and yet so liable to oppress and dominate others when we get the chance, as Smith thought we evidently are?” (Sagar 2022, p. 63. See generally the chapter on “Domination, Liberty, and the Rule of Law” (Ch. 2), especially the subsection on “Slavery and the Love of Domination” on pp. 60-67.)
  3. The conspiracy of the merchants. In the words of Sagar, “… nobody even passingly familiar with Smith’s works will be surprised to hear that he exhibited a profound hostility to the merchants ….” (Sagar 2022, p. 188.) Although it is easy to appreciate the source of Smith’s hostility — the dangers to consumers of merchants colluding to raise prices, obtain ill-gotten subsidies, and bend the rules in their favor — this hostility is paradoxical. On the one hand, the merchant classes “are dangerous to a modern commercial society” (Sagar 2022, p. 207), since they will often collude to enrich themselves at the expense of consumers, yet at the same time, they are “entirely necessary to [a modern commercial society’s] continued operation and flourishing.” (Ibid.) But how can the merchant classes be both necessary and dangerous, or good and bad, simultaneously? In a nutshell, they are good when they are pursuing legitimate commercial activities and playing by a fair set of rules that equally apply to all firms, but they are bad when they try to bend these rules or conspire to raise prices or obtain subsidies or other special favors from those in power at the expense of the general welfare of the public, and this delicate dichotomy, in turn, poses an even deeper and more fundamental Smithian paradox: how can we ever hope to constrain the self-serving rent-seeking activities of merchants without stifling their wealth-maximizing commercial activities?
  4. Smith’s politics. Towards the end of his book, Sagar mentions in passing one last enigma: if Smith were alive today, would his politics be ‘left’ or ‘right’? (See, for example, the sources listed on page 210, footnote 26 of Sagar’s book as well as the infographic below; hat tip: Reddit user u/entropy13.)
Political Compass of Adam Smith Quotes : r/PoliticalCompassMemes
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Paul Sagar’s Adam Smith Problem

There is more than one “Das Adam Smith Problem.” Case-in-point: Paul Sagar’s 2022 book Adam Smith Reconsidered, especially chapter 3, which poses a new “Adam Smith problem”, one that I had not given much thought before reading Professor Sagar’s work. Specifically: what did Adam Smith think of Rousseau, and what influence did this reclusive Swiss author have on Smith’s intellectual development?

In summary, the consensus among academics is that Smith considered Rousseau “a major intellectual interlocutor and challenger.” (Sagar 2022, p. 116.) Some Smithian scholars have even gone as far as to say that Smith wrote his first great work, The Theory of Moral Sentiments, in direct response to Rousseau’s famed Second Discourse on the origins of inequality. (See generally the collection of essays in Maria Pia Paganelli and Dennis C. Rasmussen, editors, Adam Smith and Rousseau: Ethics, Politics, Economics (Edinburgh University Press, 2018), available here, via Amazon. See also the YouTube video below of Professor Istvan Hont’s October 2010 Benedict Lecture at Boston University on “Rousseau and Smith: Political Theorists of Commercial Society.”)

Professor Sagar, however, has a different take; according to Sagar’s reading of Smith, The Theory of Moral Sentiments was more influenced by David Hume, Bernard Mandeville, and others than by Rousseau, for Smith would have considered Rousseau’s ideas either obsolete or unpersuasive! I won’t rehash the particulars of Prof Sagar’s meticulous, if not tedious, line of reasoning. Instead, for now it suffices to restate Sagar’s surprising conclusion that “the influence of Rousseau upon Smith is at best minimal and secondary.” (Sagar 2022, p. 141.) Alas, if Sagar’s conclusion about Rousseau’s limited influence on Smith is correct, then why did the Scottish professor choose to review Rousseau’s Second Discourse in his [Smith’s] March 1756 letter to the Edinburgh Review? Sagar himself is perplexed by this fact: “… we simply do not know why Smith reviewed [Rousseau’s Second Discourse] for his Scottish audience ….” (See Sagar 2022, p. 126.)

In addition to Sagar’s macro question — i.e., what influence did Rousseau have on Smith, if any? –, I would add one further micro question regarding Smith and Rousseau: did the two great Enlightenment thinkers ever meet each other in person? By all accounts, Rousseau left Strasbourg for Paris 9 December 1765, arriving a week later, and lodged in the palace of his friend, the Prince of Conti, where he met David Hume, among many other numerous friends and well-wishers. (See, e.g., Leo Damrosch, Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Restless Genius (Houghton Mifflin, 2005), pp. 404-405, available here via Amazon.) As it happens, most of Smith’s biographers think that Smith arrived in Paris sometime in December of 1765, so was Adam Smith among Rousseau’s many visitors during this time?

Note: Professor Sagar identifies at least four more Adam Smith mysteries in his book. I will survey these additional problems in the next day or two.

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Sunday song: *Made it*

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Another Adam Smith mystery: Toulouse, 1764

We know why Adam Smith was in the South of France for most of 1764 and 1765. In summary, the Scottish professor had agreed to tutor a young aristocrat — the soon-to-be 3d Duke of Buccleugh — during the future duke’s “grand tour” of the Continent, and Smith had chosen Toulouse as their center of operations. (For a summary of Smith’s travels in France and Switzerland, see generally chapters 12–14 in Rae 1895, which are available here for free, and for a map and detailed timeline of Smith’s travels in the South of France, see Alcouffe and Massot-Bordenave 2020, xiii–xiv, xviii–xix. See also chapter 13 in Ross 2010.)

And we also know that, in setting off for France, the future father of modern economics and the future duke were following an elite and well-established tradition, for the Grand Tour was a rite of passage of the sons of elite British families as well as the crown jewel of their education. (See, e.g., Cohen 2001, 129; Brodsky-Porges 1981, 178.) But in an enigmatic letter addressed to his friend and mentor David Hume — a letter postmarked from Toulouse and dated 5 July 1764 — Adam Smith refers to a book that he is writing: “The Life which I led at Glasgow was a pleasurable, dissipated life in comparison of that which I lead here at Present. I have begun to write a book in order to pass away the time”. (See Letter #82 in Mossner & Ross 1982.)

What was this lost book? Was it, as most scholars suppose, the great work that would eventually become The Wealth of Nations, or was it something else entirely, perhaps Smith’s extended essay on “Considerations concerning the First Formation of Languages”? As it happens, Smith’s speculations on the origins of language were first published in 1767 in the form of an appendix to the third edition of his Theory of Moral Sentiments (see, e.g., Land 1977, p. 677), less than one year after the Scottish philosopher’s return from France in late 1766!

Note: I will resume my series of Adam Smith mysteries on Monday; in the meantime, the full citations to the scholarly works mentioned in this blog post appear below this 1650 map of Toulouse.

1650 - "Toulouse, ville capitale du Languedoc, archevesché, parlement et  université". | Toulouse, Languedoc, Ville

Works Cited

Alcouffe, Alain, and Philippe Massot-Bordenave. 2020. Adam Smith in Toulouse and Occitania: The Unknown Years. Palgrave Macmillan

Brodsky-Porges, Edward. 1981. The Grand Tour: Travel as an Educational Device, 1600–1800. Annals of Tourism Research, 8(2): 171–186.

Cohen, Michèle. 2001. The Grand Tour: Language, National Identity, and Masculinity. Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 8(2): 129–141.

Land, Stephen K. 1977.  Adam Smith’s ‘Considerations Concerning the First Formation of Languages. Journal of the History of Ideas, 38(4): 677–690.

Mossner, Ernest C., and Ian Simpson Ross, editors. 1982. The Correspondence of Adam Smith, 2nd edition. Oxford University Press.

Rae, John. 1895. Life of Adam Smith. Macmillan.

Ross, Ian Simpson. 2010. The Life of Adam Smith, 2nd edition. Oxford University Press.

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How much of The Wealth of Nations was plagiarized?

It seems unlikely that the question [i.e. the charge of plagiarism against Adam Smith] can ever be answered for certain. (Keynes 1938, p. 43)

I will be presenting one of my works-in-progress, Die Adam Smith Probleme, at the next meeting of the International Adam Smith Society (IASS), which will take place at Waseda University in Tokyo next month. In this particular paper, which I am now honored to be co-authoring with a highly esteemed and much-cited Smith scholar (Salim Rashid), my co-author and I survey and discuss the many still unresolved mysteries surrounding the great Scottish philosopher — open questions about Adam Smith’s life and work that remain contested to this day — which is why the title of our new paper is the plural version of “Das Adam Smith Problem“. (For further details, see the chart in the post that I am reblogging below.)

To the point, Professor Rashid and I have been updating the original paper to include a new set of open and unresolved Adam Smith problems. Take, for example, Adam Smith’s famous example of a “pin factory”. In the words of my co-author (Rashid 1986, quoted in Peaucelle 2006, p. 489, available here), “It has been said of the first chapter of the Wealth of Nations, which deals with the division of labour, that it is beyond all comparison, the most popular chapter of the Wealth of Nations; no part of the work has been so often reprinted . . . no part of it is so commonly read by children, or so well remembered by them“. But did Adam Smith personally observe the factory or did he “develop his example from contemporary writings of his time” (Peaucelle 2006, p. 489), or to put it less delicately: did Smith, in fact, plagiarize from the great French Encyclopédie and other sources? (Paging my colleague and friend Brian Frye!) Stay tuned: in preparation for the IASS meeting in Tokyo, I will share many more Adam Smith problems in the days ahead.

Works Cited

Keynes, J. M. 1938. Review of W. R. Scott, Adam Smith as Student and Professor. Economic History, 4(13): 33-46.

Peaucelle, Jean-Louis. 2006. Adam Smith’s use of multiple references for his pin making example. European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 13(4): 489-512.

Rashid, Salim. 1986. Adam Smith and the division of labour: a historical view. Scottish Journal
of Political Economy
, 33(3): 292-297.

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Friday funnies: Adam Douglas Thompson

Check out his amazing Instagram page here.

new_yorker_spare_tire.jpg
Image credit: Adam Douglas Thompson
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*Frank Ramsey’s Contributions to Probability (and Legal) Theory*

That is the title of my latest article, which was just published in Bocconi Legal Papers; see https://blp.egeaonline.it/it/102/papers. Below is an excerpt with the footnotes omitted:

 Ramsey developed his new approach to chance in a paper titled Truth and Probability, which he presented for the first time at a meeting of the Moral Sciences Club in November of 1926. In this remarkable paper, which was eventually published posthumously in 1931, Ramsey sketched out an entirely new and revolutionary way of looking at probability. We can summarize Ramsey’s picture of probability in ten words: “probabilities are beliefs and beliefs, in turn, are metaphorical bets”, or to quote Ramsey’s himself, “Whenever we go to the station we are betting that a train will really run, and if we had not a sufficient degree of belief in this [outcome] we should decline this bet and stay at home”. On this subjective view of probability, one can measure the strength of a person’s beliefs in betting terms, or again in Ramsey’s own words: a “probability of 1/3 is clearly related to the kind of belief [that] would lead to a bet of 2 to 1”. Most importantly, Ramsey also showed how one’s bets – i.e., one’s subjective or personal probabilities – should obey the formal axioms of probability theory.

Frank Ramsey: A Giant Among Titans
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Wikipedia Wednesday: two great 20th-century books on *capitalism*

Capitalism and Freedom by Milton and Rose Friedman (pictured below, top row), first published in 1962 and available here in full –> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capitalism_and_Freedom

Capitalism and Slavery by Eric Williams (pictured below, bottom row), first published in 1944 and available here in full or here (first 30 pp.) –> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capitalism_and_Slavery

Bonus link: additional books about “capitalism” –> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Books_about_capitalism

Sven Gerst 🚜 در X: «Q: What is the "Liberty Power Couple" of today? 🗽 ( Rose & Milton Friedman for scale) https://t.co/0OZGnE0txL» / X
Untitled
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Repeal the CFR?

I mentioned in my previous post that “I would repeal the entire Code of Federal Regulations root and branch …” In summary, my argument for repealing the CFR is based not on policy but rather on constitutional first principles. Does Congress really have the meta-power to delegate any of its enumerated powers, such as the power to declare war, regulate commerce, create a national Post Office, protect copyrights, or any of its other enumerated and limited legislative powers? Is that what the Framers intended when they drafted the Constitution in 1787, and if so, then why didn’t they say so in the text of the Constitution? Or did they?

Either way, even if we concede that Congress has the meta-power to create administrative agencies and to delegate all or part of its legislative powers to those agencies, it is axiomatic that the Constitution does not confer on Congress a general police power. Simply put, the powers of Congress are specifically enumerated, i.e. those that are listed in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution. Therefore, since Congress lacks a general police power to define and punish crimes, it cannot delegate a power that it does not have. Yet, scattered among the 200,000-plus pages of the CFR (see here, for example) are as many as 300,000 rules and regulations that subject people to possible criminal penalties. Alas, no one really knows what the total number of federal regulatory crimes is; see here! Given this state of affairs, my argument is that, until we know the total number of federal regulatory crimes, we must throw out the metaphorical baby with the bath water and start from scratch.

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