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Adam Smith: An Enlightened Life Hardcover – 5 Aug 2010

4.3 out of 5 stars 6 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Allen Lane (5 Aug. 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0713993960
  • ISBN-13: 978-0713993967
  • Product Dimensions: 16.2 x 3.4 x 24 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,071,242 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

"This stylish biography brings to life Adam Smith''s breathtaking ambition to create a Science of Man. Phillipson''s elegant prose and erudition make clear the necessary relationship between Smith''s moral philosophy and his political economy. The reader is left with a deeper appreciation for Smith''s project and for the eighteenth-century Scottish world in which he lived. This book is both a delight to read and agenda-setting. A real achievement!"--Steve Pincus, Yale University --Steve Pincus

Named a Favorite Business Book of 2010--James Pressley, " Bloomberg BusinessWeek
"--James Pressley "Bloomberg Business Week "

"[Adam Smith] tries, very successfully, to pull together the two Smiths, letting us see how the man of feeling became the little god of finance. . . making it plain that Smith was more moral-man than market-man."--Adam Gopnik, "The New Yorker
" --Adam Gopnik"The New Yorker" (10/18/2010)

"An unabashedly intellectual biography. . . . It is indeed enlightening to understand the broader sweep of [Adam Smith''s] vision."--Nancy F./i>--Nancy F. Koehn "New York Times "

"In a feast of both writing and erudition, Nicholas Phillipson has recreated the intellectual and mercantile world of Adam Smith, and shows how it shaped Smith''s two masterpieces, the "Theory of Moral Sentiments" and the "Wealth of Nations". He sets Smith''s economics firmly in the philosophy of the Scottish Enlightenment - and especially of his great friend David Hume - and argues compellingly that for Smith material improvement was not an end in itself, but a necessary condition for human ennoblement, which was the grand aim of his life''s work. A wonderful, thought-provoking book."--Robert Skidelsky, biographer of John Maynard Keynes--Robert Skidelsky

"This is easily the best book on Smith I've read: a wonderfully accessible, thoroughly researched, full-bodied drama examining the philosopher and economist. Phillipson's biography presents Smith as a living personality, not just an imposing intellect, tracking his social, economic, and political moves from his birthplace Kirkcaldy, to Glasgow and Oxford, through his various lectures and professorships, travels around Europe, preparation of "The Wealth of Nations," and finally to his work for the government. In doing so, it makes a strong case for the importance and complexity - perhaps primacy - of the Scottish Enlightenment and the men who contributed to it. In clean and clear prose, Phillipson explains what Smith was writing and why he was writing it, whether moral philosophy, jurisprudence, rhetoric or political economy. This beguiling blend of Smith's intellection and experience should appeal to anyone interested in the making of the modern world."--David Hancock, author of "Ocean

"Nicholas Phillipson''s lifelong study of Adam Smith has been well worth waiting for. Phillipson treats Smith''s "The Wealth of Nations" as the sequel to his "Theory of Moral Sentiments". Political economy and the history of society were handmaids to the moral philosophy which Enlightenment thinkers intended as the replacement of religion. This story has never been better told than in this deeply sympathetic biography of an intellectually ambitious but personally modest man, and it is a superb portrait of the Scotland, Britain and Europe he lived in."-- J.G.A. Pocock, Johns Hopkins University--J.G.A. Pocock

Named a Best Business Book of 2010--Tyler Cowen, NPR''s "Marketplace"
--Tyler Cowen "NPR's Marketplace "

"A fascinating book. . . . Adam Smith finally has the biography that he deserves, and it could not be more timely."--Jeffrey Collins, "Wall Street Journal"--Jeffrey Collins "Wall Street Journal "

Named a Best Business Book of 2010 by Tyler Cowen, NPR''s "Marketplace"--Tyler Cowen "NPR's Marketplace "

"An unabashedly intellectual biography . . . [written] in graceful prose. . . . For all that subsequent generations, no less our own, have taken from Smith''s economic contributions, it is indeed enlightening to understand the broader sweep of his vision."--;i>New York Times"--Nancy F. Koehn "New York Times "

"This year, my favorite business book was Nicholas Phillipson''s biography of Adam Smith. It showed that Smith is still the greatest economist of all time, wise about human nature, and that he understands the power of capitalism."--Tyler Cowen, NPR''s "Marketplace"--Tyler Cowen "NPR's Marketplace "

Named a Favorite Business Book of 2010 by James Pressley, " Bloomberg BusinessWeek"--James Pressley "Bloomberg Business Week "

"[An] excellent intellectual biography. . . . When Phillipson discusses "The Wealth of Nations", it''s hard not to discern parallels between Smith''s time and our own."--Michael Dirda, "Washington Post"--Michael Dirda "Washington Post "

"[Nicholas Phillipson] tries, very successfully, to pull together the two Smiths, letting us see how the man of feeling became the little god of finance. . . making it plain that Smith was more moral-man than market-man."--Adam Gopnik, "The New Yorker"--Adam Gopnik"The New Yorker" (10/18/2010)

"An absorbing and elegant account of Smith''s mind and of the Scottish context, social and intellectual, that produced it."--Blair Worden, "The Spectator" (London)--Blair Worden "The Spectator " --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

About the Author

Nicholas Phillipson is Honorary Research Fellow in History at Edinburgh, where he has taught since 1965. He has held visiting appointments at Princeton, Yale, Tulsa, the Folger Library, Washington DC and the Ludwigs-Maximilian Universitat, Munich. He is co-director of a three-year Leverhulme-funded project on the Science of Man in Scotland. He was an associate editor of the New Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, a founder editor of the journal Modern Intellectual History, published by the Cambridge University Press, and is a past president of the Eighteenth Century Scottish Studies Society.


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Format: Hardcover
Though his name looms large as the founder of modern economic theory, Adam Smith himself is in many ways a mysterious and unknowable figure. For all of his impact upon Western thought, Smith left little beyond the two books that were his great intellectual legacy. Not even the date of his birth is known with certainty, while his correspondence consists mainly of letters from friends plaintively wondering why he never wrote back. Nicholas Phillipson doesn't shirk from the challenge of writing a biography of the man from such a scarcity of information, but in filling the blanks he provides something more by giving his readers a broader portrait of Adam Smith's intellectual world, one that sites Smith firmly within the context of the Scottish Enlightenment.

Phillipson begins by charting the formative influences that shaped Smith's intellectual development in his early years. Foremost among them was his schoolmaster in Kirkcaldy and two professors at the University of Glasgow, Robert Simson and Francis Hutcheson. Yet it was the writings of Smith's close friend David Hume which proved the most fertile inspiration for Smith's masterpieces. Phillipson shows how Smith drew upon Hume's ideas as inspiration for a comprehensive "Science of Man", which be began to articulate with his first book, The Theory of Moral Sentiments. Its publication in 1759 was greeted with acclaim, elevating Smith to the first rank of intellectual figures. A period as tutor of the young Duke of Buccleuch gave him both the opportunity to meet some of the leading figures of the Enlightenment in Europe as well as an income that freed him from his onerous academic duties.
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Format: Paperback
Adam Smith, the author of the vastly influential "The Wealth of Nations"of 1776, had nearly all his personal papers and notes destroyed a few weeks before his death in 1790. Thus, the biographer, who aims at an intellectual history, has to make do with Smith's two major works and the notes made by his students. In this biography Smith only comes to life when we meet him walking lost in thoughts on the streets of Edinburgh, oblivious to the comments of those who saw him. Smith lived in interesting times, with the Declaration of Independence of America, and in France unrest leading towards the French Revolution. But Smith lived in a Scotland just united with England, a country where the enlightened intelligentsia had to be careful not to invite the ire of Calvinist preachers. There is no drama in the book. Nor did Adam Smith look for it. He preferred to remain in his study, formulating the principles of modern economics and the advantages of free trade. Remarkable breakthroughs, but we do not get the biographical stuff that makes you want to burn the midnight oil.
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By Rolf Dobelli TOP 500 REVIEWER on 1 Jun. 2012
Format: Hardcover
No other book is as closely identified in the public mind with capitalism and free markets as Adam Smith's classic, Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. Published in 1776, The Wealth of Nations - with its imagery of an "invisible hand" at work moving markets - confirmed this quiet bachelor professor's reputation as the pre-eminent thinker of his time. The modern era sees Smith as the patron saint of fiscal conservatism, but his worldview went far beyond the foundations of economics. He believed human beings could advance in all aspects of society to attain lives of freedom, choice and respect. And he saw the potential embodiment of his dreams in a new country called the United States of America. Historian Nicholas Phillipson's "intellectual biography" of Smith delves into his prolific work and meagerly documented life, starting with his childhood as a widow's son in a small Scottish town. The result is a dense, scholarly book that presumes a reader's grounding in 18th-century philosophical history. Though it's hardly a breezy read, getAbstract recommends Phillipson's work, which notably clarifies Smith's role as a catalyst for political and economic change in a turbulent era.
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