Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Acknowledgements
- Citations and Abbreviations
- Series Editor’s Introduction
-
1 Introduction -
2 On the Place of Politics in Commercial Society -
3 Rousseau and the Scottish Enlightenment: Connections and Disconnections -
4 The Role of Interpersonal Comparisons in Moral Learning and the Sources of Recognition Respect: Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s amour-propre and Adam Smith’s Sympathy -
5 Actors and Spectators: Rousseau’s Contribution to the Eighteenth-century Debate on Self-interest -
6 Pursuing Sympathy without Vanity: Interpreting Smith’s Critique of Rousseau through Smith’s Critique of Mandeville -
7 Adam Smith and Jean-Jacques Rousseau on the Vices of the Marketplace -
8 Julie’s Garden and the Impartial Spectator: An Examination of Smithian Themes in Rousseau’s La Nouvelle Héloïse -
9 Sentimental Conviction: Rousseau’s Apologia and the Impartial Spectator -
10 Being and Appearing: Self-falsification, Exchange and Freedom in Rousseau and Adam Smith -
11 Citizens, Markets and Social Order: An Aristotelian Reading of Smith and Rousseau on Justice -
12 Smith, Rousseau and the True Spirit of a Republican -
13 Left to Their Own Devices: Smith and Rousseau on Public Opinion and the Role of the State -
14 ‘Savage Patriotism’, Justice and Cosmopolitics in Smith and Rousseau - Notes on Contributors
- Index
(p.x) Series Editor’s Introduction
(p.x) Series Editor’s Introduction
- Source:
- Adam Smith and Rousseau
- Author(s):
Gordon Graham
- Publisher:
- Edinburgh University Press
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- Title Pages
- Acknowledgements
- Citations and Abbreviations
- Series Editor’s Introduction
-
1 Introduction -
2 On the Place of Politics in Commercial Society -
3 Rousseau and the Scottish Enlightenment: Connections and Disconnections -
4 The Role of Interpersonal Comparisons in Moral Learning and the Sources of Recognition Respect: Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s amour-propre and Adam Smith’s Sympathy -
5 Actors and Spectators: Rousseau’s Contribution to the Eighteenth-century Debate on Self-interest -
6 Pursuing Sympathy without Vanity: Interpreting Smith’s Critique of Rousseau through Smith’s Critique of Mandeville -
7 Adam Smith and Jean-Jacques Rousseau on the Vices of the Marketplace -
8 Julie’s Garden and the Impartial Spectator: An Examination of Smithian Themes in Rousseau’s La Nouvelle Héloïse -
9 Sentimental Conviction: Rousseau’s Apologia and the Impartial Spectator -
10 Being and Appearing: Self-falsification, Exchange and Freedom in Rousseau and Adam Smith -
11 Citizens, Markets and Social Order: An Aristotelian Reading of Smith and Rousseau on Justice -
12 Smith, Rousseau and the True Spirit of a Republican -
13 Left to Their Own Devices: Smith and Rousseau on Public Opinion and the Role of the State -
14 ‘Savage Patriotism’, Justice and Cosmopolitics in Smith and Rousseau - Notes on Contributors
- Index