Adam Smith: a Bourgeois Revolutionary in the Style of Danton and Robespierre?
“Smith’s Enlightenment
demands to be advanced. His 1776 treatise, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of
Nations, is not a product of the Scottish Enlightenment but of the
cosmopolitan radical Enlightenment, stretching from the coffeehouses of
Rotterdam to the meeting rooms of Calcutta.”
“Smith, as much as Georges
Danton or Maximilien de Robespierre, was a leading bourgeois revolutionary”.…
”In order to fully grasp the radical specification of Rousseau’s call
for the conscious advance of human freedom contained in Smith’s work — that is, in order to grasp the
work’s bourgeois-revolutionary implications — readers and interpreters must get beyond the outward
sobriety of the Wealth of
Nations to the “very violent attack…upon the whole commercial
system” that lies at its core. [Adam Smith to Andreas Holt 10/26/1780, in Correspondence, 251]
…”Though his work is chiefly associated with the demand for free markets
and the “invisible hand,” none of this is in fact peculiar to Smith.” …
… “Is improvement in the circumstance of the lower ranks of the people
to be regarded as an advantage or as an inconvenience to society. The answer
seems abundantly plain. …The liberal reward of labor, as it is the effect of
increasing wealth, so it is the cause of increasing population. To complain of
it is to lament over the necessary effect and cause of the greatest public
prosperity. [85, 93, 96, 99]
Comment
Outwardly, Spencer Leonard, writes with a deceptive authority,
until his piece is read closely. He runs different historical periods together
with a writer’s skill that on simple reflection could not have possibly
influenced Smith writing decades, even centuries earlier.
Spencer Leonard also quotes out of the original context and
misleadingly adds his own conclusions about what Adam Smith actually meant at
the time he wrote to Andreas Holt for example. He also writes with that Salon-based loaded quip, which only
acolytes in awe of his genius, will lap up. Those readers more familiar with
both Smith’s Works and times are likely to cast a more critical eye over his
pronouncements of the “bourgeois-revolutionary implications” of “Wealth Of
Nations” and its supposed critique that “articulates unmistakably that
century’s critique of our own interminable twentieth century”.
That is mumbo-jumbo.
So is this: “The masses of humanity, including in
Europe and America, have not ceased to demand a world in which they do not
require the benevolence or indulgence of the baker, the butcher, the brewer, or
anyone else in order to live their lives as they choose under the law.”
Where does Smith advise that consumers depend on
the “benevolence” of the “Butcher, Brewer, and Baker”? He specifically denies that people can
rely on “benevolence” for their dinners, or whatever else they need. He advises those seeking their dinners
to address the interests of potential seller, just as those sellers seeking customers for
their wares should to address the interests of potential buyers. In short, negotiate.
Smith never said anything about a “cosmopolitan radical Enlightenment, stretching from
the coffeehouses of Rotterdam to the meeting rooms of Calcutta”. Note the
lyrical journalese for which no sources for these claims are given, probably
explaining why I do not recognise Spencer
Leonard’s allusions to them.
Spencer Leonard quotes from one of Smith’s letters in 1780: “readers and
interpreters must get beyond the outward sobriety of the Wealth of Nations to the “very
violent attack…upon the whole commercial system” that lies at its core." [Adam
Smith to Andreas Holt 10/26/1780, in Correspondence, 251.]
Whereas Smith was comparing his critique of “the Principle of the commercial,
or Mercantile System” (WN IV.i.139) with his short, one-page “harmless” eulogy
to David Hume in 1776.
Smith’s subject in Book IV of Wealth Of Nations was the commercial system enunciated in the
dominant orthodoxy of mercantile political economy of his day and which was followed by successive
British governments (tariffs, protectionism, and all) and not the commercial
market system he outlined in Books I and II (WN), which he praised as the successor
alternative to an economy based solely on agriculture. This blatant
misrepresentation is supposed to support by Spencer’s imagined Smith, the
‘bourgeois revolutionary”, in the traditions of “Danton and Robespierre”(!!).
The sentence and its ideas: ”Though his work is chiefly associated with
the demand for free markets and the “invisible hand,” none of this is in fact
peculiar to Smith” is just ridiculous factually, for the many reasons readers
of Lost Legacy will be familiar (see yesterdays post).
I do not know of the Charnel House’s readership or what they believe, but if Spenser Leonard’s ideas are representative then they have some ways to go yet
to acquire genuine knowledge of Adam Smith’s ideas.
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