Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Adam Smith and the Virtues of Enlightenment
Adam Smith and the Virtues of Enlightenment
Jun 29, 2026 9:15 PM

Adam Smith (1723—1790) is best remembered today as the celebrated author of The Wealth of Nations (1776), who defined the workings of market economies and defended principles of liberty. To his contemporaries, particularly his fellow thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment, Smith was recognized first for his profoundly original contributions to moral philosophy and natural jurisprudence.

In an important new book, Adam Smith and the Virtues of Enlightenment, Charles Griswold, professor of philosophy at Boston University, challenges readers to look again at Smith’s work in its entirety. He argues that the enthusiasm with which Smith has been adopted as a pioneering economist has not been balanced by careful study of Smith’s full teachings. Griswold seeks to redress this imbalance by providing prehensive and penetrating analysis of Smith’s moral and political philosophy as it appeared in Smith’s first published work, The Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759).

Until recently, The Theory of Moral Sentiments has been overshadowed by The Wealth of Nations. Yet, in terms of Smith’s overriding wish to articulate a theory of society that described the ethos of mercial culture that evolved in eighteenth-century Britain, The Theory of Moral Sentiments is in an important sense Smith’s integral text. In its pages, Smith describes a moral vision that serves as the best guarantor of civility mercial society. This vision is based on the cultivation of virtue, the “bettering of our condition,” and permits individuals to e selfish impulses that many believe mercial culture. The necessary tools for the cultivation of virtue include impartiality, sympathy, and reason.

Smith was well-aware of the potential risks involved in mercial activity, should motivations for it be reduced to avarice or love of luxury. By developing what Griswold calls “an achievable notion of virtue” available to nearly all responsible individuals, Smith provides an innovative means for ing vulnerabilities in human nature that often lead to corruption and social disorder. Smith’s arguments in favor of the possibility of widespread moral and social improvement include the pursuit of such “fundamental goods” as reputation, health, and property. Furthermore, his moral vision extends ideas of aristocratic excellence to members of the merchant and trading classes of society.

Griswold’s analysis of Smith’s thought occurs on a number of levels. Griswold places his book in the context of a continuing historical and philosophical discussion about the nature of the Enlightenment and modernity. He focuses readers’ attention on Smith’s defense of liberal moral and political views, with special reference to Smith’s treatment of ancient philosophers, particularly Plato, Epictetus, and the later Roman Stoics. Griswold examines Smith’s use of rhetoric and method with a view to illustrating how Smith formulated his arguments in The Theory of Moral Sentiments. Readers are then prepared to move on to a discussion of the mechanisms through which virtue is cultivated: sympathy, selfishness, imagination, and passion–all of which Smith deemed central to human life.

It is one of the strengths of Griswold’s work that he confronts plexity of Smith’s thought directly, particulary concerning these very mechanisms, for none of them pletely reliable guides in and of themselves. For example, as Griswold points out, sympathy permits an individual to reflect upon the consequences of a given action based upon the amount of pleasure or pain it may cause another. The virtuous person avoids taking action that will result in negative consequences, for he does not wish to be seen as selfish or unruly. In this instance, feelings of sympathy restrain self-interest. In other circumstances, however, feelings of sympathy may actually be motivated by self-love or vanity, in which case, sympathy does not contribute to virtue. Smith believed human beings are naturally inclined to view themselves as others see them. The manner in which we behave is directly related to how our actions will be perceived by others.

This “spectatorial vision” was one of the unique facets of Smith’s moral system. From it, Smith developed his notion of the Impartial Spectator, the ultimate arbiter of conduct that rivals the Invisible Hand as one of Smith’s most original creations. The Impartial Spectator could not be swayed by emotional impulses on moral questions. Griswold explains that Smith relied on bination of the following facts to define the Impartial Spectator: “We view ourselves through the eyes of others; we learn to distinguish between praise and blame actually given and that which ought to be given; we praise and blame others, and thus, ourselves, with qualities we take to be praise- or blame-worthy; we thus e capable of viewing ourselves through the eyes of an ‘ideal’ other (an impartial spectator).” Conscience, in turn, is the “internalized impartial spectator.”

Conscience could be a useful and necessary tool in human life, Smith acknowledged, but is susceptible to confusion, for es from “mortal extraction.” Griswold notes that Smith’s understanding of conscience highlights his “acute sense of the dangers of corruption inherent in the interplay among social morality, conscience, rules, and religion.”Smith recognized that social institutions, including religious ones, could contribute to “the evolution of conscience,”but that such encouragement could also lead to religious fanaticism.

As Griswold expands his discussion of the application of Smith’s moral thought to practical life, readers are guided through Smith’s treatment of merce, and religion. Smith ordered the destruction of his lecture notes and unfinished manuscripts upon his death; therefore, his lectures on religion are lost. Griswold adds to current discussion about Smith on religion in terms that take readers beyond the traditional identification of Smith as a deist. This is particularly helpful to those interested in how matters of faith, liberty, and conduct intermingle.

The Theory of Moral Sentiments went through six editions in Smith’s lifetime, and this eminent thinker spent his last years refining the final version of the book. There is a certain poignancy to the fact that Smith concluded his life’s work where it began–with the study of human morality.

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
A new era of constitutional drift
Just over 100 days into President Joe Biden’s administration, whatever hopes we held out that he would govern as a moderate are gone. The president seems determined to transform American society from the top down. Candidate Biden promised national unity and the restoration of lawful government. President Biden has, thus far, given us budget-busting spending packages, interference in the courts, and a flurry of executive orders of dubious constitutionality. These are not just bad policies; Biden’s program strikes at...
Profit and Responsibility
The standard critique of woke capitalism is that woke ideas are ruining business. Instead of engaging in political panies should focus on turning a profit by creating superior goods and services. In his book, Woke Inc., Vivek Ramaswamy takes a different approach to the argument. He argues that “woke capitalism” isn’t wrong because it’s ruining business, but because woke business is ruining the foundations of our democracy. When businesses engage in political and social activism, they undermine the way...
Above Us Only Sky: How Ideology Manipulates Reality & Reverence as the Remedy
Saint John Paul II famously said that the problem with pornography “is not that it shows too much of the person, but that it shows far too little.” The pornographer, in presenting a woman fully exposed, obscures, rather than reveals, who she is. He measures her by her usefulness and totalizes that metric as the only lens through which she can be seen. This is how ideology works, too. What the pornographer does to women, the ideologue does to...
Opening the Mind
It is rare to find in a single work a carefully documented intellectual history of Islam as well as a cri de coeur for contemporary reforms—or at least it is rare to find both tasks done well. Mustafa Akyol’s Reopening Muslim Minds, however, impressively achieves both feats with substance and elegance in a work that deserves to be acclaimed and widely read. Akyol, a Turkish journalist and senior fellow at the Cato Institute, has devoted his career to this...
Ideology as Unreason
As anyone who has spent time in the world of ideas knows, the word ideology is ubiquitous. For some people, it’s simply shorthand or a synonym for their political philosophical beliefs. When they refer to “their ideology,” they mean their conservative, liberal, socialist, traditionalist, integralist, or corporatist philosophy (or bination of two or more of these positions) of what the political, social, and economic order should be. Strictly speaking, however, ideology means something rather different. This es clearer when...
On the Resilience of Ideology
Those of us who have a reached a certain age remember the time when a popular cliché declared the “end of ideology.” The idea was first formulated in 1960 in a book of the same title by Harvard sociologist Daniel Bell.1 For the next few decades, the idea that ideologies were a phenomenon of the past, and that they were fading away, remained popular among intellectuals. It seemed to find its final confirmation in the collapse of the Soviet...
Justice, and Only Justice: The Beauty of Impartiality and the Ugliness of Her Rivals
Today’s cries for e highly stylized. People don’t want “justice, and only justice,” the justice of Deuteronomy 16:20. No, they want justice plus. They want social justice, racial justice, or intergenerational justice. Justice by itself, unadorned with adjectives, seems boring parison to these glamorous cousins. But justice is good and should be pursued for its own sake and not for a predetermined ideological e or preferred social goal, the way adjectival forms of justice tend to do. In what...
Playing to Angels
The Honorable Henry Hyde, in a speech to the National Right to Life Committee, reminded the Committee of something I hope you will never forget. He said that we are not “playing to the gallery, but to the angels, and to Him who made the angels.” Ponder that for a moment. If there is one insidious idea that we have worked to inoculate you against during your time with us, it is this tendency, all too prevalent, to play...
Distinguishing Sound Economics from Ideology
It’s difficult to know who to trust these days. We are bombarded peting claims, perspectives, and information, and at such a rapid pace, it almost induces vertigo. MIT professor Sinan Aral characterizes social media and its societal impact as The Hype Machine—the title of his 2020 book on the topic. Aral points out that “This Hype Machine connects us in a munication network, exchanging trillions of messages a day, guided by algorithms, designed to inform, persuade, entertain, and manipulate...
Does the First Amendment Fulfill Its Promise of Religious Liberty?
Religion forms culture, and culture dictates laws. A core element of culture is its understanding of the human person and of marriage, sexuality, and the family. In the post-Christian era, as Jewish and Christian morality loses its hold on the culture, we are witnessing new attitudes about these foundational issues. The laws of this country—whether enacted by legislation or executive orders or imposed by judicial fiat—have followed suit, recognizing novel individual rights. The most prominent include the right to...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved