Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Adam Smith in His Time and Ours
Adam Smith in His Time and Ours
Dec 12, 2025 11:00 AM

Let me resolve this paradox by stating that Jerry Muller is a Professor of History at the Catholic University of America. He has written a book which economists and libertarians ought to read. It is also written in such a style that the general reader can derive great benefit from it.

The book deftly summarizes a mass of scholarship from many different areas–political philosophy, ethics, psychology, history, and literature–without trivializing it into bland encyclopedic entries.

The author sheds light on the various traditions to which Smith was reacting: Greek and Roman philosophy, Christian thought, the Classical Republican tradition, the history of economic thought from Scholasticism, Mercantilism, and natural right theories of Hobbes and Locke.

The classical liberal and libertarian will be skeptical from the start: “designing” and “decent” evoke social planning and puritanical repression. Muller does not pull his punches. Smith is a Popperian “piecemeal social engineer.” Smith is primarily a moralist who wishes the economy and polity to produce better men and women. The economy is part of this civilizing process.

One of the strong points of the book is Muller’s examination of Smith’s social philosophy, properly so-called. There are many intermediary institutions of family, church, and club which are neither part of the political constitution of a society nor are they part of the market. The whole realm of manners and morals are the proper province of these intermediary institutions. Smith recognized that the stronger they are, the less intrusive government needs to be.

Smith’s primary intention is to create institutions which promote self-control. Internal freedom is, in the final analysis, necessary if external freedom is to flourish. If the general public need self-control, then the elites need to develop “superior prudence” for social matters to go well. The potentially corrupting influence of the lifestyles of the rich and famous was as clear to Adam Smith in the eighteenth century as to any viewer of “Hard Copy” in the twentieth.

Muller goes out of his way to show Smith’s patibility with the laissez-faire position. Although this has been known for many years, there are still some who have not gotten the message. Some conservatives have unnecessarily limited his vision and scope. But the wearing of neckties with Adam Smith’s image on them by Reaganauts such as Ed Meese was not an affirmation of laissez-faire. It was simply worn by the mainline paleo-conservatives who believe in both free markets (unfanatically) and virtue (unfanatically).

Muller’s view of Smith would fortably with a Wilhelm Roepke, Michael Novak, or Stan Evans. Unlike the free-market imperialists who try to consume everything in the jaws of self-interest or utility maximization models, Smith pays attention to the language and rhetoric appropriate to the different spheres of human activity. Self-interest is helpful, but certainly not exclusive, in discussing the division of labor and exchange. Sympathy and beneficence are appropriate terms to discuss the family and other small groups within society. One needs different rhetorical strategies to discuss these issues, which helps explain many of the differences between the Theory of Moral Sentiments and The Wealth of Nations.

If I had to mend a single book to get a reader, scholarly or otherwise, started on Smith, it would be Muller’s. He does not dismiss Smith as an antiquarian curiosity who has e outdated. He has found Smith a living reality who is still worth taking seriously in the twentieth century.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
Christians in the Former Hindu Kingdom Feel Pressured Anew by Imported Hindu Nationalism
  More than 15 years after Nepal officially became a secular democracy, the former Hindu monarchy may have a religious extremism problem, incited and aggravated by its closest neighbor.   In an alarming development, Indian Hindutva ideology and politics have begun to spread throughout the country, as local experts and journalists report. This proliferation has resulted in a recent spate of attacks...
Flying the Unfriendly Skies
  The best scenes in Masters of the Air, a nine-part series on Apple TV, arrive at 25,000 feet, as squadrons of B-17 Flying Fortresses cruise in formation to bomb Germany during World War II. Oxygen masks strapped on, the crews man their posts and brace for flak and Luftwaffe fighter planes. The ball turret gunner squeezes into his glass globe...
Learning to Cast Our Cares
  Learning to Cast Our Cares   By: Anne Peterson   Casting all your care upon him; for he cares for you. - 1 Peter 5:7   I could tell Mike was aggravated. There didn’t seem to be enough money at the end of the month to take care of the bills. I could see it erode his self-confidence. But it reminded me of...
Rules for Royalists
  Since the smash hit of Jordan B. Peterson’s 12 Rules for Life, publishers have been looking for other notable figures who might provide self-help for young, conservative men. I reviewed another such entry for Law Liberty, and now I turn to one by Eduard Habsburg, from the storied European aristocratic family that once ruled over half of Europe, most of...
Nationalists Seek to Make Nepal Hindu Again
  More than 15 years after Nepal officially became a secular democracy, the former Hindu monarchy may have a religious extremism problem, incited and aggravated by its closest neighbor.   In an alarming development, Indian Hindutva ideology and politics have begun to spread throughout the country, as local experts and journalists report. This proliferation has resulted in a recent spate of attacks...
Freedom in the Light
  Freedom in the Light   Weekly Overview:   Honesty is more than the words we say. It’s a posture of the heart. We weren’t made to try and be something we’re not. God never asks us to keep up appearances. He longs for us to have the courage to be vulnerable. He longs for us to be so founded in his unconditional...
Chuck Swindoll Steps Down as Senior Pastor, but Won’t Retire
  Chuck Swindoll has said that pastors should never retire, and the 89-year-old wont be stepping away from the pulpit even as his church welcomes his successor.   Stonebriar Community Church in Frisco, Texas, announced this week that Swindoll will transition to founding pastor, continuing to preach on Sundays, as Jonathan Murphy becomes its senior pastor on May 1.   This is a...
A Few Questions for God?
  Weekend, April 13, 2024   A Few Questions for God?   I heard a loud shout from the throne, saying, “Look, God’s home is now among his people! He will live with them, and they will be his people. God himself will be with them.” (Revelation 21:3 NLT)   It makes me smile when I hear people say that when they get to...
Baptists Call on House Speaker Mike Johnson to Stand with Ukraine
  Southern Baptist leaders have written to US House Speaker Mike Johnson, a member and former official of their denomination, urging him to support Ukraine in Russias war against its Eastern European neighbor.   As you consider efforts to support Ukraine, we humbly ask that you consider the plight of Christians, wrote the leaders, who either have ties to the SBCs Southwestern...
More Porridge? Senegal Christians Debate Exchanging Holiday Foods with Muslims
  Muslims in Senegal love to share meat. Its Christians share porridge.   Ending their monthlong Ramadan fast this week, the faithful in the Muslim-majority West African nation invited Christian friends to celebrate Korite (Eid al-Fitr), focus on forgiveness and reconciliation, and serve a wholesome meal of chicken.   A little over two months later during Tabaski (Eid al-Adha), the mutton from sheep...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved