IziBooks IziBooks IziBooks IziBooks

Suivre l’actualité de ce titre (promotion, parution...)

Résumé

« Notre petit volume est composé d’extraits empruntés aux Recherches et choisis dans la partie de cet ouvrage qui nous a paru la plus instructive et la plus originale. Nous avons laissé de côté les digressions et quelques chapitres dont la lecture pourrait fatiguer l’attention du lecteur. Nous nous sommes borné quelquefois à citer des fragments intéressants. Si nous n’avons presque rien emprunté à la dernière partie de l’ouvrage relative à l’examen des systèmes d’économie politique et des théories fiscales, c’est parce que cette partie du livre a triomphé définitivement dans l’opinion de tous les hommes éclairés des théories et des pratiques blâmées par l’auteur. Les idées qu’Adam Smith a victorieusement combattues n’ont plus cours que chez les hommes sans culture et ne sont guère défendues que par les personnes qu’inspire l’intérêt privé. Notre publication ne saurait convaincre ni les uns ni les autres.
Nous avons pris pour texte la traduction de Germain Garnier, qui a servi à la publication de plusieurs éditions des Recherches, en ayant soin d’en écarter toutes les notes dont on l’a chargée. Nous n’avons voulu présenter au lecteur que le texte d’Adam Smith.
Quant au plan de l’ouvrage, il nous a semblé inutile de l’exposer après l’auteur. Nous avons préféré publier simplement la table des matières telle quelle a été rédigée par Joseph Garnier. »

Fruit d’une sélection réalisée au sein des fonds de la Bibliothèque nationale de France, Collection XIX a pour ambition de faire découvrir des textes classiques et moins classiques dans les meilleures éditions du XIXe siècle.

Auteur

  • Adam Smith (auteur)

    Adam Smith FRSE (baptised June 5, 1723 O.S. / June 16 N.S. - July 17, 1790) was a Scottish moral philosopher and a pioneering political economist. He is also the founder of economics. One of the key figures of the intellectual movement known as the Scottish Enlightenment, he is known primarily as the author of two treatises: The Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759), and An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776). The latter was one of the earliest attempts to systematically study the historical development of industry and commerce in Europe, as well as a sustained attack on the doctrines of mercantilism. Smith's work helped to create the modern academic discipline of economics and provided one of the best-known intellectual rationales for free trade, capitalism, and libertarianism. Adam Smith is now depicted on the back of the Bank of England £20 note.The productivity of free exchange:Smith showed that this vast 'mercantilist' edifice was folly. He argued that in a free exchange, both sides became better off. Quite simply, nobody would trade if they expected to lose from it. The buyer profits, just as the seller does. Imports are just as valuable to us as our exports are to others. Because trade benefits both sides, said Smith, it increases our prosperity just as surely as do agriculture or manufacture. A nation's wealth is not the quantity of gold and silver in its vaults, but the total of its production and commerce - what today we would call gross national product. The Wealth of Nations deeply influenced the politicians of the time and provided the intellectual foundation of the great nineteenth-century era of free trade and economic expansion. Even today the common sense of free trade is accepted worldwide, whatever the practical difficulties of achieving it.Social order based on freedom:Smith had a radical, fresh understanding of how human societies actually work. He realised that social harmony would emerge naturally as human beings struggled to find ways to live and work with each other. Freedom and self-interest need not produce chaos, but - as if guided by an 'invisible hand' - order and concord. And as people struck bargains with each other, the nation's resources would be drawn automatically to the ends and purposes that people valued most highly. So a prospering social order did not need to be controlled by kings and ministers. It would grow, organically, as a product of human nature. It would grow best in an open, competitive marketplace, with free exchange and without coercion. The Wealth Of Nations was therefore not just a study of economics but a survey of human social psychology: about life, welfare, political institutions, the law, and morality.The psychology of ethics:It was not The Wealth Of Nations which first made Smith's reputation, but a book on ethics, The Theory Of Moral Sentiments. Once again, Smith looks to social psychology to discover the foundation of human morality. Human beings have a natural 'sympathy' for others. That enables them to understand how to moderate their behaviour and preserve harmony. And this is the basis of our moral ideas and moral actions.

Auteur(s) : Adam Smith

Caractéristiques

Editeur : Collection XIX

Auteur(s) : Adam Smith

Publication : 16 novembre 2021

Edition : 2e édition

Intérieur : Noir & blanc

Support(s) : Livre numérique eBook [ePub + Mobi/Kindle + WEB]

Contenu(s) : ePub, Mobi/Kindle, WEB

Protection(s) : Marquage social (ePub), Marquage social (Mobi/Kindle), DRM (WEB)

Taille(s) : 1,55 Mo (ePub), 2,9 Mo (Mobi/Kindle), 1 octet (WEB)

Langue(s) : Français

Code(s) CLIL : 3377

EAN13 Livre numérique eBook [ePub + Mobi/Kindle + WEB] : 9782346148684

Vous aimerez aussi

Les promos du moment

--:-- / --:--