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Full Description
Looks at all aspects of the pivotal intellectual relationship between two key figures of the EnlightenmentThis collection brings together an international and interdisciplinary group of Adam Smith and Jean-Jacques Rousseau scholars to explore the key shared concerns of these two great thinkers in politics, philosophy, economics, history and literature.Rousseau (1712 78) and Smith (1723 90) are two of the foremost thinkers of the European Enlightenment. They both made seminal contributions to moral and political philosophy and shaped some of the key concepts of modern political economy. Among Smith's first published works was a letter to the 'Edinburgh Review' where he discusses Rousseau's 'Discourse on the Origin of Inequality'. Smith continued to engage with Rousseau's work and to explore many shared themes such as sympathy, political economy, sentiment and inequality. Though we have no solid evidence that they met in person, we do know that they shared many friends and interlocutors. In particular, David Hume was Smith's closest intellectual associate and was also the one who arranged for Rousseau's stay in England in 1766.ContributorsTabitha Baker, University of Warwick, UK.Christel Fricke, University of Oslo, Norway.Charles L. Griswold, Boston University, USA.Ryan Patrick Hanley, Marquette University, USA.Mark Hill, London School of Economics, UK.Mark Hulliung, Brandeis University, USA.Jimena Hurtado, Universidad de los Andes, Columbia.John McHugh, Denison University, USA.Jason Neidleman, University of La Verne, USA.Maria Pia Paganelli, Trinity University, USA.Dennis C. Rasmussen, Tufts University, USA. Neil Saccamano, Cornell University, USA. Michael Schleeter, Pacific Lutheran University, USA. . Adam Schoene, Cornell University, USA. Craig Smith, University of Glasgow, UK.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Citations and Abbreviations
Series Editor's Introduction
Part I: Adam Smith and Jean-Jacques Rousseau
1. IntroductionMaria Pia Paganelli, Dennis C. Rasmussen and Craig Smith
2. On the Place of Politics in Commercial SocietyRyan Patrick Hanley
3. Rousseau and the Scottish Enlightenment: Connections and DisconnectionsMark Hulliung
Part II: Self-interest and Sympathy
4. The Role of Interpersonal Comparisons in Moral Learning and the Sources of Recognition Respect: Jean-Jacques Rousseau's amour-propre and Adam Smith's sympathyChristel Fricke
5. Actors and Spectators: Rousseau's response to eighteenth-century debates on self-interestMark Hill
6. Pursuing Sympathy without Vanity: Interpreting Smith's Critique of Rousseau through Smith's Critique of MandevilleJohn McHugh
Part III: Moral Sentiments and Spectatorship
7. Adam Smith and Jean-Jacques Rousseau on the Vices of the MarketplaceMichael Schleeter
8. Julie's Garden and the Impartial Spectator: an examination of Smithean themes in Rousseau's La Nouvelle HéloïseTabitha Baker
9. Sentimental Conviction: Rousseau's Apologia and the Impartial SpectatorAdam Schoene
Part IV: Commercial Society and Justice
10. Being and Appearing: self-falsification, exchange and freedom in Rousseau and Adam SmithCharles L. Griswold
11. Citizens, Markets and Social Order: An Aristotelian Reading of Smith and Rousseau on JusticeJimena Hurtado
Part V: Politics and Freedom
12. Smith, Rousseau and the True Spirit of a RepublicanDennis C. Rasmussen
13. Left to Their Own Devices: Smith and Rousseau on Public Opinion and the Role of the StateJason Neidleman
14. Rousseau and Smith: Sympathy, Justice and CosmopoliticsNeil Saccamano
Notes on Contributors
Index