GENERAL
Browse by Subjects
New Releases
Coming Soon
Chases's Calendar
ACADEMIC
Textbooks
Browse by Course
Instructor's Copies
Monographs & Research
Reference
PROFESSIONAL
Education
Intelligence & Security
Library Services
Business & Leadership
Museum Studies
Music
Pastoral Resources
Psychotherapy
Paperback
$28.95
Add to GoodReads
Wealth of Nations
Adam Smith
Political economy had been studied long before Adam Smith. But Wealth of Nations (1776) established it for the first time as a separate science. Smith based his arguments on vast historical knowledge, and developed his principles with remarkable clarity. What set this work apart was its statement of the doctrine of natural liberty. Smith believed that "man's self-interest is God's providence" - that if government abstained from interfering with free competition, the invisible hand of capitalism would emerge from the competing claims of individual self-interest. Industrial problems would be resolved and maximum efficiency reached. After more than two centuries, Smith's work still stands as the best statement and defense of the fundamental principles of capitalism.
Details
Details
Globe Pequot / Prometheus
Pages: 594 Trim: 5½ x 8⅜
978-0-87975-705-2 • Paperback • December 1991 •
$28.95
• (£19.99)
Series:
Great Minds Series
Subjects:
Political Science / Political Economy
,
Business & Economics / Economic History
,
Business & Economics / Economics / Theory
Wealth of Nations
Paperback
$28.95
Summary
Summary
Political economy had been studied long before Adam Smith. But Wealth of Nations (1776) established it for the first time as a separate science. Smith based his arguments on vast historical knowledge, and developed his principles with remarkable clarity. What set this work apart was its statement of the doctrine of natural liberty. Smith believed that "man's self-interest is God's providence" - that if government abstained from interfering with free competition, the invisible hand of capitalism would emerge from the competing claims of individual self-interest. Industrial problems would be resolved and maximum efficiency reached. After more than two centuries, Smith's work still stands as the best statement and defense of the fundamental principles of capitalism.
Details
Details
Globe Pequot / Prometheus
Pages: 594 Trim: 5½ x 8⅜
978-0-87975-705-2 • Paperback • December 1991 •
$28.95
• (£19.99)
Series:
Great Minds Series
Subjects:
Political Science / Political Economy
,
Business & Economics / Economic History
,
Business & Economics / Economics / Theory
ALSO AVAILABLE
NEWSLETTERS