Adam Smith and the Economy of the Passions

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A01=Jan Horst Keppler
Author_Jan Horst Keppler
behavioural economics
Category=KCA
Category=KCP
Category=KCZ
Category=QD
Category=QDTS
Conscious Human Intentions
economic psychology
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Exogenous Norms
Great Judge
hand
history of economic thought
Horizontal Principle
Horizontal Sphere
Hutcheson's Moral Sense
Hutcheson’s Moral Sense
Iconic World
impartial
Impartial Spectator
impartial spectator theory
Increasing Returns
invisible
Invisible Hand
mechanism
moral
moral philosophy
Moral Sentiments
Paradoxical Synthesis
Profound Coherence
psychological foundations of market behaviour
Public Infrastructure
Real Spectator
Roundabout
Secondary Metaphors
Semantic System
sentiments
Smith's Major Works
Smith's Oeuvre
Smith's Work
Smithian System
smiths
Smith’s Major Works
Smith’s Oeuvre
Smith’s Work
social recognition dynamics
spectator
Strange Attractors
sympathy
Sympathy Mechanism
Vertical Principle
work

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415747455
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Nov 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The fertility of Adam Smith’s work stems from a paradoxical structure where the pursuit of economic self-interest and wealth accumulation serve wider social objectives. The incentive for this wealth accumulation comes from a desire for social recognition or "sympathy" – the need to recognise ourselves in our peers – which is the primary incentive for moderating and transforming our violent and egotistical passions. Adam Smith thus examines in detail the subliminal emotional structure underlying market behaviour.

This new book by Professor Jan Horst Keppler presents an Adam Smith for the 21st century, more sceptical, searching and daring than he has ever been portrayed before. Without disputing the benefits of Adam Smith’s liberal economic system, Professor Keppler’s original contribution explores the anarchic passions constantly threatening to destroy all social bounds, and how the overarching "desire for love" and social recognition provides the Smithian individual with the incentive to transform his unsocial passions into a desire for social advancement and economic wealth with the view to gaining the vital approbation of his peers. One of the most striking results of this new reading of Adam Smith is the latter’s insistence on the primacy of exchange value over use value. In other words, the quest for wealth is exclusively driven by the value it represents in the eyes of others rather than by any value in individual use.

At a moment of crisis, where the link between "true" economic values and "virtual" financial values is more fragile than ever, Adam Smith’s work is a profoundly contemporary reminder that in the absence of personal, ethical groundings our economic actions are only grounded in the game of mirrors we play with our peers. This book will be of interest to postgraduate students and researchers in the History of Economics, or indeed any reader with an interest in the psychological foundations of a market economy and its theoretical representations as developed by Adam Smith.

Jan Horst Keppler is Professor of Economics at the University Paris - Dauphine and Senior Researcher at PHARE Institute on the History and Epistemology of Economics at the University Paris I Pantheon - Sorbonne

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