Adam Smith's Non-Existent Problem
Larry Arnhart’s Blog, Darwinian Conservatism, asks “Does
Oxytocin Solve the Adam Smith Problem? HERE
‘What Smith identifies as the "propensity
to truck, barter, and exchange" is actually moral in the sense that we
must care about the needs of others if exchange is to be successful. For
you to give me what I want, I must give you what you want. And that means
that I must serve the needs of others, so that they will serve my needs.
Ultimately, trade is in the self-interest of each trader. But a purely
selfish trader who cares not at all for the interests of others, and who is
willing to cheat others whenever possible, is not likely to be a successful
trader for very long.”
Comment
This
expresses a view with which I fully agree and I have often expressed it in
similar words on Lost Legacy.
However, without developing my argument just now, I have expressed the
view that if you understand Smith’s Moral Sentiments on morals and Wealth Of
Nations on the meaning of self-interest, there is and never was an “Adam Smith
problem”.
Smith’s
19th- century German critics, who alleged there was such a problem,
were just plain wrong.
Once
the erroneous early 19th-century notion that Smith favoured and advocated laissez-faire became a general belief, those lat-19th-century German critics chased a non-existent, errant Adam Smith down a cul de sac of their own making.
Larry
Arnhart, the author of the above paragraph, grasps the difference between Adam
Smith’s ideas on self-interest and modern notions from the “greed is good’
school of Ayn Rand and Hollywood screen writers.
In
answer to Larr’ys question: “Does
Oxytocin Solve the Adam Smith Problem?”, the short answer is ‘no’, interesting
as the “The Moral Molecule”, the new book by Paul Zak, might be for readers.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home