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Misquote in "Of the Origin and Use of Money"The quote given in the part of the article that relates to "Of the Origin and Use of Money" (Book I Chapter IV) was a misquote. It was not related to the use of money but was a digression on monopolies taken from the famous Chapter VII (Book I) "Of the Natural and Market Price of Commodities". In fact, this paragraph was cited twice in the article - I removed the first one. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 141.30.244.213 (talk) 16:35, 19 October 2008 (UTC) "Invisible Hand" Prank Quote and number misquoteBog4rt - I removed the following quote from the Invisible Hand section because it was nothing more than someones taste-less joke. "The idea behind the Invisible Hand is that a man stands behind you and all ofa sudden, woo there's a hand down your pants!" I replaced the prank quote with the two literal references in Wealth of Nations towards the "invisible hand." This section of the article still needs some serious commentary to flesh it out. I did the same yesterday with "the masturbating hand" and "boner jams 03" Maybe this article should be protected. --יהושועEric 19:03, 25 September 2006 (UTC) "Both-Benefit" Transactions QuoteFor the life of me I can't find the supposed quote cited in the article that "a voluntary, informed transaction always benefits both parties." I have searched through WN and TMS. Someone either needs to come up with a citation for the quote or it needs to be removed.
== Outline of the Work == I removed this part because at the bottom there are links to very good online text of the work, and I don't see that this part adds much. It's just a skeleton. Outline of the Work
Evolution within this articleIn previous revisions, the outline linked to articles - like "Wealth of Nations: Volume One". At present there isn't enough information to warrent such a structuring. But 'Nations' is a huge work, and as this article grows, will such a structuring make more sense?
immigration controlCan someone shed some light on how Nations deals with this subject? Yes, he does. In Book I Chapter 10 Part 2, Smith devotes a fair amount of discussion to the Poor law of the time and its effect on the free movement of labour between parishes within England. Basically people couldn't move from the parish in which they were settled to another without owning a set amount of property, unless they had the permission of the receiving parishioners since parishioners were directly responsible for supporting the destitute of their parishes. This led to labour shortages in specific trades in specific parishes as well as wide variations in the price of labour between neighbouring parishes since parishioners didn't want to receive an immigrant whose family they might have to support with their taxes when he was out of work. The parallel between this parochial immigration control and modern national immigration control is exact and the consequences identical although on a larger scale. -- Derek Ross | Talk 14:28, 13 Jun 2004 (UTC) restructuring two sentences in introduction
Removal of material - uncited material from das KapitalI have removed this from the article:
Ed, where in Kapital does Marx say this? Please provide a citation or even a quote! To the best of my knowledge, Marx's engagement with Smith is much more specific and subtle. In the preface to the second German edition he describes Kapital as a necessary sequal to Smith's book! Sometimes Marx's view of Smith is mixed: he praises Smith for calliong attention to labor-power as the source of value of commodities, but faults Smith for not seeing labor as a normal activity. Elsewhere he praises Smith for recognizing that the value of currency is determined byt the relationshi between the currency in circulation and the commodities in circulation, but faults Smith for viewing money (really, gold and silver coin) as any other commodity. I know of two more basic criticisms of Smith. Marx criticizes Smith (and Ricardo) for assuming that average prices equal the average value of commodities. He also criticizes Smith's theory of primitive accumulation, and suggests that primitive accumulation really comes from the separation of producers from the means of production. This really is a profound criticism (whehter you agree with it or not) but it is not really the same as what you said. And even in this "criticism" (which is NOT a criticism of Smith's claims about the morality of capitalism but rather a criticism of Smith's analysis of capitalist accumulation and economic growth in the 18th century), marx approvingly quotes Smith, who wrote "Whenever the legislature attempts to regulate the differnces between masters and their workmen, its counsellors are always the masters." Anyway, Ed, please provide the citation and a brief quote if possible of Marx making the criticism of Smith you call attention to, SR
Without anybody noticing, The Wealth of Nations became a collection of quotes selected to prove that Smith was against corporations.--AN Yes, I just noticed that. However when I read the Wealth of Nations, I got the impression that Smith really *was* against corporations, cartels, etc, so I'm not too bothered about that. The real problem is that it unbalances the article since it isn't really about the Wealth of Nations now. It's about Smith's attitude to employers instead. -- Derek Ross I got the same impression from the book. Isn't Smith's book, in great part, about his attitude to employers? That should be reflected through quotes.Lir 10:36 Oct 23, 2002 (UTC) I think that it should be reflected but Smith's book was about so much more. Its discussion of how a real day to day economy works is still one of the most readable ones about. At the least this article should contain a summary of the chapters discussed in the book. The discussions of what gives money value, why division of labour is economically efficient, why chambers of commerce are bad and how rents work should be much more widely known and each deserve some discussion in the article. -- Derek Ross Also the influence this book had on everyone from Marx to Milton Friedmann needs to be mentioned. This was a very influential book -- Derek Ross I removed the folowing from the article until it can be reworked. My reasons are the following: 1) an encyclopedia should present an account of current debates not an author's own views. The following reads as if it is the author's own views. If I am wrong at it really reflects a current and well-known scholarly interpretation of Smith, it should be identified with its proponoents. 2) the passage is mostly a string of quotes from Smith (with no page numbers). This is inappropriate to an encyclopedia article. The article should summarize the work and contribution of Smith, and if there are debates, summarize the debates. It should not itself be argumentative, and it should not just be a colection of quotes. Slrubenstein
The following is one of such interpretations. Smith against modern economy?Some argue that Smith was arguing against modern economics due to the proliferation of statements throughout the book which argue against the very notion of a corporation or corporate entity.
It should be noted that capitalism is derived from mercantilism rather than something that replaced mercantilism. In that light, one wonders whether Smith really is the "father of capitalism", as is commonly stated. Smith says, "Is improvement in the circumstance of the lower ranks of people to be regarded as an advantage or as an inconveniency to society? The answer seems plain. Servants, labourers, and workmen make up the far greater part of every society. What improves the circumstances of the greater part can never be regarded as an inconveniency. No society can be flourishing and happy, of which the far greater part of the members are poor and miserable." Smith notes, "The pretence that corporations are necessary is without any foundation." although at this point he was refering to incorporated guilds and similar monopolistic organisations rather than companies in the modern sense. Smith adds, "When masters combine they commonly enter into a private agreement not to give more than a certain wage. The complaints of workmen are perfectly well founded. The rent of land is a monopoly. It is not proportioned to the landlord nor his holdings, but to what the renter can afford." Smith goes on, "Nothing can be more absurd than the doctrine of the balance of trade upon which almost all regulations of commerce are founded. The sneaking arts of tradesman are erected into political maxims for the conduct of an empire. Commerce, which ought to be a bond of union and friendship, has become the most fertile source of discord and animosity. The violence and injustice of the rulers of mankind is an ancient evil. Their interest is directly opposite to that of the great body of people." Smith explains, "More want employment than can get it. Many are willing to take it upon lower terms than ordinary and thus the wages sink. A considerable number are thrown out of employment each year, who must then bid in order to find work, thus lowering wages to levels of bare subsistence. There are funds in the hands of the employers of industry sufficient to maintain a great number of people." Smith continues, "The careers of scholar and beggar are nearly synonymous. The public would derive great benefit if the schools and colleges were more reasonable than at present."
I don't understand the switch in tense of:
Should you say "and was thus much more useful"? Or are you saying this book was so well written that the ideas remain relevant today? When you say "recent books" do you mean recent with respect to books in 2004 or with respect to books in 1776? I would imagine there are better introductions to economics today. -- User:EmRick I meant:
I maintain that it is so well written that one can forgive the occasional ideas which have been superseded by later research. It may well be the case that there are now many better introductions to economics as far as the technical issues are concerned but there are few, if any, introductions which are such a pleasure to read. -- Derek Ross | Talk The Famous "Invisible Hand Quote"The previous version of the article cited the invisible hand and the butcher, baker, and brewer as all coming from Book 1 Chapter 2, when, in fact, the invisible hand quote comes from Book 4 Chapter 2. I inserted the quote so readers would not hunt in Book 1 Chapter 2 and never find it. I hope that is ok with everyone. Removing "mischaracterized/politicized" quote..."The Wealth of Nations is often mischaracterized and politicized. Many people are confident in their opinions regarding the author, the work, and the subject matter, yet have never read it."
Considering your examples, I would see that these are all widely read documents. Much more widely read than the WoN. Thus it is not surprising that there is "a modicum of dissent" about the interpretation of their contents. However since the number of people who have read them is comparable to the numbers dissenting, it is, by and large, informed dissent. However I take your point that there are a few documents like the WoN for which the number of people who have an opinion about it dwarfs the number who have read it. That is quite unusual and therefore worth noting in the articles of any documents of this type. -- Derek Ross | Talk 06:15, Mar 29, 2005 (UTC) Division of labor and the invisible handI know that the discussion of the "invisible hand" in the article follows the standard interpretation, but given that the phrase is only used once in the book, and given that Smith is pretty vague about the other cases to which it applies, can we really state so confidently that the various examples discussed (e.g. the butcher and the baker) are instances of the invisible hand at work? A more radical interpretation (which I'm not necessarily endorsing) is that Smith was talking about the dangers of British capitalists investing and importing from abroad, and was (rather wishfully) hoping that their patriotism would prevent them from doing so. Also, there is no mention here of Smith's more negative remarks about the division of labour. He certainly thought it led to greater economic efficiency, but he also had misgivings about the humanitarian consequences of people working highly repetitive and specialised jobs; these aren't discussed in the article. Cadr 14:40, 17 Jun 2005 (UTC) in responseCommonly quoted 'the invisible hand' is a ubiquitous quote/reference. From articles in the Economist to jokes involving hiding your hand in your sleeve. Therefore, some indication of what it means is appropriate to reference material on Nations.
yes we can How is it not obvious to the reader (as opposed to skimmer) that an invisible hand is an appropriate metaphore for unintentional effect? The use of this metaphore as a rhetorical summary of preceeding points is pretty standard. What would today be called a sound-bite has been a staple of rhetoric for centuries. The invisible hand is the sound-bite for all of Smith's examples of the unintentional beneficial effects of free trade.
what are you talking about Give a specific example of his misgivings. This sentence and the one about patriotism imply a side-POV or significant misunderstanding of the work. Please clarify.
in response2You don't need a physical copy, the whole thing is available in one big text file for easy searching: An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations at Project Gutenberg . Is you're point that the interpretation is wrong, or that it lacks quotes? You are correct about Smith bringing up unhappy situations. He sheds light on many, many more. However, the work is highly structured rhetorically; your quote is out of place juxtaposed against the invisible hand. This is why I suspected a POV or unfamiliarity; Smith specifically deals with unethical and unconstructive behavior in many parts of the book. And these can be dealt with directly. In fact, one of the weaknesses of this article and in the common conceptions of the work is in missing the fact that Smith does point out the unflattering aspects of human behavior. It's a cliche that people attack Nations on the basis that it supports the crass upper class, yet it actually attacks the status quo. In "Manufacture of Consent", Noam Chomsky points out that many two-sided arguments are actually one-sided in that both sides make the same erroneous assumptions. Such a thing has happened to Nations. The upper-crass claim it as their own, and then the work is attacked on the erroneous assumption that this claim is true. What an Irony, that the most significant work debunking the pseudo-logic of the upper-crass is claimed by them, and subsequently attacted and/or ignored as though this were true. The work needs to be reintroduced; and with as little rhetoric as possible. (yes, I used some in this response, I won't in the article.) One of the important feature of the invisible hand is that Smith is giving a common, well known example of people persuing their own interests without compromising others'. It is a tacit refutal of a long used, common advocation; that supplies are essentially imutably limited and therefore acting in one's best interest at the expense of others is entirely reasonable. Smith carefully, slowly paints a vivid counter-example. In fact, Smith consistently specifically attacks the erroneous assumptions that both sides make. He bypasses the whole argument of whether 'zero sum games(modern terminology for brevity)' are ethical and simply says they are irrelevant/unreasonable/counterproductive once division of labor renders the whole greater than the sum of its parts. This is important, because "zero sum games are unethical" always wins on the surface, yet is too often accompanied with "but they're perfectly reasonable/ok/even noble". -- backing up just this paragraph would take a lot of time and effort and hopefully this article eventually will do that (or something completely different if I'm wrong). Yes, I have read the book, the whole thing and several parts more than once. I'm writing all of this in the possibly erroneous belief that you have missed some of the themes of the work. forgive me if I'm wrong. To use your example, a wikipedia-section on "negative effects of the division of labor" is actually a very good idea. Someone should start it. But don't break the invisible hand without recognizing that it ultimately is an argument against greedy and dishonest behavior though not against selfish behavior. Otherwise the people who think zero-sum games are reasonable and advocated by Smith will go on believing such and pass that belief on to others.
P.S. there's nothing in there about "foriegn investment destroying the domestic economy". That doesn't mean that such a thing can't happen. I'm just pointing out that it's not there. By the way, the theme in Chapter 3 (division of labor is limited by the extent of the market) is that international trade expands division of labor (up to that point and beyond given a very positive introduction) and is therefore good. The productivity of the domestic economy and all its parts is improved by the increas in options available. He uses the trade between India and London as an example without pointing the Brittish Occupation. Smith denounced subtly and quietly and therefore lived long enough to give away his wealth to charity. A reasonable approach given Scotland's proximity to England. On the other hand, Thomas Paine who denounced loudly and unsubtly went back to europe and died broke in prison. Smith would say that trade with India would be even more profitable if the Indians were free to persue their own interest -- except that might be recieved unfavorably (treasonous) by King George. You can find parts of the book where Smith says that a governing body is unlikely to more competently nor without corruption direct the labor of others. He does not specifically say King George should stay out of America's affairs and likewise with India, but logically they should and Smith makes several less obvious, less pointed attacks on royalty and the details of commerce between England and its colonies.
Diamond-Water Paradox: out of place, inaccurate/misleading.
RiseAbove 4 July 2005 23:36 (UTC)
this diamond-water thing, and maybe that has motivated you to include it where it doesn't necesarily fit well. P.S. I said rarity, demand and several other factors. Here is a quote from nations: (is this the one you are saying explicitly refutes the idea that scarcity plays a role in price?) "Their highest price, however, seems not to be necessarily determined by any thing but the actual scarcity or plenty of these metals themselves. It is not determined by that of any other commodity, in the same manner as the price of coals is by that of wood, beyond which no scarcity can ever raise it. Increase the scarcity of gold to a certain degree, and the smallest bit of it may become more precious than a diamond, and exchange for a greater quantity of other goods." In fact the book is repleat with examples of scarcity increasing the prices. For example, protectionism artificially raises the price of services and commodities by reducing the ready supply of the necesary labor and raw materials. This is central to the work, it's why he wrote it. The Diamond-Water 'paradox' is a wonderful thing in its own right. But why not put it somewhere more flattering to it?
Two of the many ways to increase the price of something; make it more useful or make it more rare. Inventing a better mouse trap or working harder are ethical approaches to improving utility; on the other hand smashing looms or throwing shoes into to machinery increases price in an unethical way. Same with protectionism (domestic and foreign): if some one must get permission from an authority to enter a trade and the conditions of entering are disliked yet irrelevant to the trade, then the number of people entering that trade (like making wagon wheels) ...bla bla bla... apprenticeships are depicted by smith as institutions that reduce the supply of skilled laborers increasing the price and lowering the quality. Greedy, dishonest manipulations/limitations of supply is a major theme of the book. Smith says the consumer is a better judge than the granting authority and that the free market is a better mechanism than an apprenticeship. Smith establishes as a general phenomenon that manipulations in supply affect the price, then uses this as a foundation for undermining protectionist arguments. His message is, look past the rhetoric and ask yourself if what the speaker is advocating artificially constricts supply and if he stands to gain from it; what is the real agenda? Unless the diamond-water paradox is all about the games that people play in "conspiracy to raise prices" ( - Smith), I don't see it's relevance. It seems to me that it is fundamentally different, and of a fundamentally different mindset from Nations. I havn't removed or edited the diamond-water paradox; you've made a case for things outside of Nations but I still don't see the direct and significant relevance. Forget about the merits of the diamond-water paradox by itself, I'm asking is it really in Nations? If you think it is, make a case. P.S. why do you keep accusing me of falling back on or relying on philisophical ad-nasea? I'm falling back on having read the book. Not on interpretations of interpretations, nor of incorporating Nations into a modern framework or any of that. It's a historical text, and I'm relyin on having read the book. Keep it factualIt is not our place to decide who was right or wrong about what, which author was "brilliant", which theory of value is correct, or which of the later schools of economic thought is closer to the ideas of Adam Smith. The purpose of this article is to briefly present what Adam Smith says in The Wealth of Nations. Nothing more, nothing less. -- Mihnea Tudoreanu 21:09, 24 July 2005 (UTC)
Five basic rulesI once read that the Wealth of Nations could be summerized in five basic rules that lead to wealth in a nation, as I can best remember: 1. making of contracts 2. protection of property 3. making a profit 4. inheritance 5. (cannot remember) Does anyone Know the source and correct
RiseAbove 04:49, 10 August 2005 (UTC) I believe its relevantI don't know whether this actually belong here, but I can't think of anything better. My reasoning behind putting it hear is it meantion something that I really admire and never seem to figure out how so many ignore it. Norway seem to be heaven on earth, a country that doesn't preach individualism. Sure, you can argue this is because of oil, but just look at South Africa for a moment or even Saudi Arabia. I even doubt the rich enjoy it in South Africa with the kind of crime they have down there. If they had some social programs to reduce poverty, Aids would be better controlled as Thailand expereince proved. But, fuck it, thats too left. Its better for all of us to live in hell than sharing the NATURAL resources.[1] -- Anon contributor
RiseAbove 01:54, 16 September 2005 (UTC) First modern work in the field of economics.To my understanding this is completely false. Article Adam Smith mentions that many of his theories had already been introduced by other thinkers. This needs to have a mention of The National Gain. Lapinmies 06:34, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
RiseAbove 22:02, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
While I am not familiar with the work "The National Gain," I do know that Richard Cantillion's "Essay on Commerce in General" preceded "The Wealth of Nations," and, being a fairly advanced work, merits mention under this passage as well.--Nate 08:36, 19 December 2006 (UTC) UK vs. US EnglishI always dread this happening. The most recent revision has largely standardized the English in the article to UK English. As you can tell from how I just spelled "standardized" I'm not a UK English speaker. US English is the most widely used English in the world due to the vast proliferation of US culture. However, UK English has (I believe) more users in the strictly numerical sense, so long as we count India and Pakistan. I don't know what relevance those previous two sentences have, but whatever. Anyway, I ask: why format this page in UK English as opposed to leaving it as US or mixed? "Because the book itself was written by a Scotsman in UK English" does not seem to me to be a good enough reason. Pending discussion I'll probably revert the edits, although, thinking about it, it hardly seems worth it... RiseAbove 08:56, 18 February 2006 (UTC) Speaking as a Scotsman and a UK speller, I agree with you that this should not have been done. It is a trivial and pointless change. The perpetrator would have been far better employed adding content to the article than doing this sort of contentious make-work. I would have no objection if you reverted the changes although like you I doubt that it is worth the trouble. -- Derek Ross | Talk 17:33, 18 February 2006 (UTC)
"American Economics"If anyone sees the page history you will see that a certain user has been editing this page to promote an economic belief he adheres to. We've had alot of pro-LaRouche edits and if you see the page history you can see that there are others who also disapprove of it as well and have been trying to maintain the page as it is.--Jersey Devil 04:10, 14 March 2006 (UTC) You are reverting my edit and I am not associated with LaRouche. Are you seriously saying the American System of Hamilton and Clay are LaRouche ideas only? You are not assuming good faith with my edits as you have stalked them and proceeded to delete what I contribute. That is not good manners or civil. You have called my edits LaRouche edits constantly and I've asked you to stop and you continue. By what reason do you consider deleting a legitimate economic link to a legitimate policy in American History proper? Your reversion of proper material can be considered POV reverting and your comments above I do consider to be personal attacks upon myself. Name calling and grouping me into some sort of group falsely is not very honorable nor honest. --Northmeister 04:26, 14 March 2006 (UTC) Publishing HistoryDoes anybody the history of the translation of the book or how many of each edition was made?
Recent deletionsAfter some serious thinking (over many months) I deleted the following: "Smith himself, however, would not necessarily have been in favor of laissez faire; he makes no claims to the effect that the free market can always solve economic problems. For example, with regard to regulations, he says, :Whenever the legislature attempts to regulate the differences between masters and their workmen, its counsellors are always the masters. When the regulation, therefore, is in favour of the workmen, it is always just and equitable; but it is sometimes otherwise when in favour of the masters. (Book 1, Chapter 10). However, in The Wealth of Nations it is difficult to determine with certainty Smith's actual opinion of government regulation of the private sector. On the one hand, he stated the above, but on the other hand, he also wrote: :[T]he obvious and simple system of natural liberty establishes itself of its own accord... The sovereign [i.e., politician] is completely discharged from a duty, in the attempting to perform which he must always be exposed to innumerable delusions, and for the proper performance of which no human wisdom or knowledge could ever be sufficient: the duty of superintending the industry of private people. (Book 4, Chapter 9)." There were two main reasons behind this: 1) I feel it provides some unnecessary information outside the scope of the article, and may serve to confuse readers more than it helps them. 2) I feel it provides ammunition for Wikipedia critics who are looking for ways to accuse Wikipedia of left-wing bent and unencyclopedic articles. Here is why: it is patently obvious to anyone who reads his works that Smith was against government regulation of the private sector. However, the above passages seem to suggest that because he felt that a certain type of regulation may not have always been bad, that regulation itself was sometimes appropriate. I think, if readers examine Wealth of Nations and other Smith works closely, they will come to see that he did not believe that regulation was appropriate under any circumstances save emergency and (perhaps) war. The above section contains the clause: "it is difficult to determine with certainty Smith's actual opinion of government regulation of the private sector." This is, I believe, untrue. It is easy to determine Smith's position on regulation. He was against it, vis: - "[The man of system] seems to imagine that he can arrange the different members of a great society with as much ease as the hand arranges the different pieces upon a chess-board; he does not consider that the pieces upon the chess-board have no other principle of motion besides that which the hand impresses upon them; but that, in the great chess-board of human society, every single pieces has a principle of motion of its own, altogether different from that which the legislator might choose to impress upon it." from The Theory of Moral Sentiments, Part VI, Section II, Chapter 2 - "The natural effort of every individual to better his own condition ... is so powerful, that it is alone, and without any assistance, not only capable of carrying on the society to wealth and prosperity, but of surmounting a hundred impertinent obstructions with which the folly of human laws too often encumbers its operations." from The Wealth of Nations Book IV Chapter V Section IV - "The real and effectual discipline which is exercised over a workman is ... that of his customers {as opposed to the government}. It is the fear of losing their employment which restrains his frauds and corrects his negligence." from The Wealth of Nations, Book I Chapter X &c., &c. Therefore, I think we do ourselves and wikipedia a disservice by attempting to be as "neutral" with regard to Smith's policies as this article has been. Therefore, I removed the "offending" section. However, as I said, this was the product of a lot of thought. If you disagree with me and you have a strong argument, I'm willing to be swayed. RiseAbove 21:04, 8 May 2006 (UTC) Distrust of TradesmenI find it awfully interesting that the quote "People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices." is used as evidence that Smith was against unionization. The specific quote had to do with corporations, not unions, and was critiquing corporate law that not only allowed for collusion on prices, but required it. He mentioned in the same chapter, which was about corporations and their danger, that when the government interferes on the behalf of the workers (who would make up such a guild) that it is always just and fair while it is not always so when on behalf of the owners, because the owners are always the council to the parliament when they make laws to interfere in the market. I am announcing that I will start reading this and giving accurate quotes to back exactly what Smith was saying in this book. Unfortunately, first I must dig out my copy of the book from my basement, which I recently packed away not thinking I'd need until I moved. KV 05:24, 17 May 2006 (UTC) "Feudalism was still dominant"???Under "anachronisms" this article states that feudalism was still dominant in Europe. In 1776??? Am I missing something or is this simply incorrect? Feudalism says it ended between the 12th and 14th centuries. If no one responds here, I will remove this line from the article. -Halidecyphon 15:37, 17 May 2006 (UTC)
Getting rid of vandalismI'm no expert on either economics or Adam Smith. However there is some obvious vandalism on this page such as "The Wealth of Nations DOES NOT cover some key economic concepts". I'm changing these obvious statements (when and if I find them) Speedything 09:55, 27 September 2006 (UTC)
Bizarre Water Paradox Edit WarThere is an other section on this page about the diamond water paradox. It's very long. To summarize, the water paradox is not a paradox at all in the Wealth of Nations; on the contrary, Smith relies on the reader taking it for granted that scarcity drives prices upward. Diamonds are scarce, and as with gold and silver, this scarcity is the cause of their high price. btw: I've read Nations, and in fact Book I, Chap. 4 (to give just one example) is dependent on the idea that scarcity, not intrinsic utility, is the cause of the high price of precious metals. As a result, Smith argues, their primary utility in society is as a compact medium of exchange - as opposed to copper bars or oxen. The water-paradox paragraph is so utterly incorrect, that I think it may be some sort of vandalism. I looked at the user's page and he/she claims to have written most of the the article. So it's either delusion or vandalism.--Joe54897415 07:05, 13 July 2007 (UTC) Scottish EnlightenmentA humble defence of a recent edit of mine: It was not merely written at the same time, Smith was a part of the Scottish Enlightenment. And this is highly relevant to the motivation, style and content of the work. I know that the term 'economics' was not in use at the time, but neither did Smith entitle his book 'comparative political economy across nations'. "Economics" is the appropriate modern term for the substance of 'Nations', as it deals with ... economics. Mathmatical Principles of Natural Philosophy (translated from latin) is a milestone work in physics; likewise, Nations is a founding work in economics. --69.110.47.207 10:22, 4 December 2007 (UTC) The infamous good ol' daysI removed this at it is, to understate it, erroneous:
The state was a declining monarchy/nobility at a time when feudal corporations (something like unions on steroids) still existed, their fingers were in all sorts of unwelcome places. Smith specifically complains about them, and champions cases where restrictions - such as gold furth from the kingdom - had phased out. Interested readers can look at 'policies of europe' in chap.10, and volumn two, chap.1, and there are many more examples.. I'll stop, and just say that the very motivation of Nations was in large part the very heavy hand of the state. --69.110.47.207 10:44, 4 December 2007 (UTC) ControversyIt would be good to mention the fact that John Nash has proved that fundamental theories of Adam Smith are wrong, according to his discoveries about game theory by the 50's and he won the Nobel Prize in 1994 for that discoveries, though them had not been spread and Smith theories are still in use. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 201.254.69.209 (talk) 19:40, 15 January 2008 (UTC)
It is important to note that, as of 9 october 2008, the Controversy and Continuing Relevance sections of this article are not up to standards and had ought to be removed. If something must be said about proper or improper use of the Wealth of Nations by political movements, it should be more even handed and less specific. The current form of the Controversy section, which basically says "Lefties abuse it THIS way and right wingers abuse it THIS way" isn't NPOV just because it dishes out punishment to both sides. As for the continuing relevance bit, it is absolutely not the case that a 200 year old, 900 page long text written without jargon or graphical representations, in the effusive style of the 18th century, is a good introductory text. Staypuft9 (talk) 18:50, 9 October 2008 (UTC) Atul13998's many additionsI know that Atul, if you read this, you are new to Wikipedia, and it's welcome that you're making additions. But would you please follow the format of the page? It's important to not just give descriptions of the chapters, but citations; ideally the section should be a proper summary of the chapter. And can you clean up the format - deleting the stub tag if the section is no longer a stub? Otherwise, it's likely that the changes will be deleted. Wikidea 13:37, 29 April 2008 (UTC) Socialism?There are two important features of Smith's concept of the "invisible hand". First, Smith was not advocating a social policy (that people should act in their own self interest), but rather was describing an observed economic reality (that people do act in their own interest). Second, Smith was not claiming that all self-interest has beneficial effects on the community. He did not argue that self-interest is always good; he merely argued against the view that self-interest is necessarily bad. It is worth noting that, upon his death, Smith left much of his personal wealth to charity. -- said someone who forgot to sign
The first work of economics?This is an argument without a cause - it's not reasonable to suggest that any document is the `first`. While claiming first is unfortunately common, it's not strictly relevant to Nations. Newton said he saw further by standing on the shoulders of giants, which is an accurate account of most works. Einstein is credited with Relativity, but so should Lorentz, Poincare and Mach, to say nothing of the general scientific community surrounding physics and electrodynamics. And this is an argument - as such it belongs in the discussion, not in the article.
Of the Real and Nominal Price of Commodities, or of their Price in Labour, and their Price in Money"It is this greater availability that accounts for the deflation of the price;" Didn't the price inflate? --Golden Eternity (talk) 22:40, 19 November 2008 (UTC) |
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