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Temple
of Adam Smith

Smith, Adam (1723-90), British philosopher and economist, whose celebrated
treatise An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations
was the first serious attempt to study the nature of capital and the historical
development of industry and commerce among European nations.
Smith was born in Kirkcaldy, Scotland, and educated at the universities
of Glasgow and Oxford. From 1748 to 1751, he gave lectures on rhetoric
and belles-lettres in Edinburgh. During this period, a close association
developed between Smith and the Scottish philosopher David Hume that lasted
until the latter's death in 1776 and contributed much to the development
of Smith's ethical and economic theories.
Smith was appointed professor of logic in 1751 and then professor of
moral philosophy in 1752 at the University of Glasgow. He later systematized
the ethical teachings he had propounded in his lectures and published them
in his first major work, Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759). In 1763 he
resigned from the university to accept the position of tutor to Henry Scott,
3rd duke of Buccleuch, whom he accompanied on an 18-month tour of France
and Switzerland. Smith met and associated with many of the leading Continental
philosophers of the physiocratic school, which based its political and
economic doctrines on the supremacy of natural law, wealth, and order.
He was particularly influenced by the French philosophers François
Quesnay and Anne Robert Jacques Turgot, whose theories Smith later adapted
in part to form a basis for his own. From 1766 to 1776, he lived in Kirkcaldy
preparing The Wealth of Nations (1776). Smith was appointed commissioner
of customs in Edinburgh in 1778, serving in this capacity until his death.
In 1787 he was also named lord rector of the University of Glasgow.
Smith's Wealth of Nations represents the first serious attempt in the
history of economic thought to divorce the study of political economy from
the related fields of political science, ethics, and jurisprudence. It
embodies a penetrating analysis of the processes whereby economic wealth
is produced and distributed and demonstrates that the fundamental sources
of all income, that is, the basic forms in which wealth is distributed,
are rent, wages, and profits.
The central thesis of The Wealth of Nations is that capital is best
employed for the production and distribution of wealth under conditions
of governmental noninterference, or laissez-faire, and free trade. In Smith's
view, the production and exchange of goods can be stimulated, and a consequent
rise in the general standard of living attained, only through the efficient
operations of private industrial and commercial entrepreneurs acting with
a minimum of regulation and control by governments. To explain this concept
of government maintaining a laissez-faire attitude toward commercial endeavors,
Smith proclaimed the principle of the "invisible hand": Every individual
in pursuing his or her own good is led, as if by an invisible hand, to
achieve the best good for all. Therefore any interference with free competition
by government is almost certain to be injurious.
Although this view has undergone considerable modification by economists
in the light of historical developments since Smith's time, many sections
of The Wealth of Nations, notably those relating to the sources of income
and the nature of capital, have continued to form the basis for theoretical
study in the field of political economy. The Wealth of Nations has also
served, perhaps more than any other single work in its field, as a guide
to the formulation of governmental economic policies.
"Smith, Adam," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 97 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1996
Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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