Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Adam Smith We Need
The Adam Smith We Need
Jul 15, 2026 2:57 PM

Scholars’ tendency to read the great economist through the lens of their own philosophical and mitments is neither unexpected nor helpful. One book helps us identify some of those biases and also something closer to Smith’s true legacy.

Read More…

There are two reasons to read Glory M. Liu’s prehensive book,Adam Smith’s America: How a Scottish Philosopher Became an Icon of American Capitalism. The first is that if you are a student of economics or history, there is a remarkable amount of well-documented information packaged into a logically sequential analysis that is well worth your time. But the second is profoundly important for students of economics and advocates of a free society: the very questions history is seeking to answer about Smith are the questions that must animate our study of economics and a free society today.

Put differently, the reason for modern debate about Smith and his legacy is essentially the fundamental debate of our time: How are we to “lay the epistemic foundations for a social theory of markets and how they promote freedom”? How do we defend our “vision of a prosperous, free, and flourishing society, embedded in, rather than liberated from, traditional moral values?”

Historians would not be debating the real legacy of Adam Smith as moral philosopher or laissez-faire ideologue if those substantive issues had been resolved today. Throughout Liu’s careful and impressive effort, one thing is abundantly clear: a lot of people who do not agree with each other want Adam Smith on their side. In reading this work, you’ll be exposed to the tremendous reality that even the most reputable of scholars “bring their own set of beliefs and preoccupations to bear on his ideas.” And while I believe a harmonization of Smith’s vast contributions to the subjects mercial society, political economic, and moral philosophy is quite achievable, I am struck by Liu’s success in portraying much of the 19th, 20th, and now 21stcenturies’ analyses of Smith to be devoid of harmonization and heavy on selectivity.

Liu does a masterful job showing that all the varying schools of thought in 19thand 20thcentury applications of political economy are “talking their book” in making the case for Smith as a free trade zealot versus a workers’ rights evangelist versus a laissez-faire crusader versus a great inquisitor of matters ethical and moral. Some “selective” Smith is more defensible than others. To her credit, she waited until the epilogue to raise the laughable proposition that Smith was influenced by Rousseau in concerns about markets. Richard Ely and Edwin Seligman, writing in the late 19th century, are more selective than they are revisionist, and the same is probably true of Milton Friedman and George Stigler in the next century (though with different agendas in each case). I am more sympathetic to some of Frank Knight’s and Jacob Viner’s reading of things, but they also suffer from pletion. The most recent trend of full-blown left-wing adoption of Smith as some kind of social justice crusader is the most obvious gnat in search of a windshield. Through the sequence of post-Smith treatments of Smith (embodied in the various scholars and movements I just listed, and many others dealt with in the book), we see not merely historical treatments at odds with one another but the greater divide we continue to face in economic and ethical study today.

“Das Adam Smith Problem” is the name 19thcentury German scholars gave to alleged tensions betweenThe Theory of Moral Sentimentsand hisWealth of Nationsmagnum opus. This “problem” is, for some, an excuse to dismiss Smith (for alleged inconsistency), an excuse to embrace him (because he allegedly got one or the other right), or a straw man that further obfuscates the subjects at hand. One need not agree with all the specific conclusions Smith draws in either work to appreciate the driving force behind both, and to seek a fundamental unity in bined subjects. Reconciling the Adam Smith ofTheory of Moral Sentiments(which posits restraint and sympathy as necessary preconditions to virtuous cooperation) with the Adam Smith ofWealth of Nations(which looks at the productive power of mankind’s labor as opposed to his moral sentiments, and posits self-interest and mercial society as the tools to drive economic growth) is not nearly as hard a historical task as we may believe it to be. The challenge is not in exegeting Smith; the challenge has always been and continues to be harmonizing economics as social science and moral philosophy, and making application to policy. This process is paramount, and plexity explains the fighting over ownership rights of the ideas of Adam Smith.

This book can be extremely useful for those who admire Adam Smith, who are torn as to what to believe about Adam Smith, and for those who are new to him. At one point Liu states:

Multiple Smiths coexisted. There was the textbook Adam Smith: the one who founded political economy, who proposed an incorrect theory of value, and who made inferences from close observations of everyday life. That version of Smith served as a pedagogical tool for illustrating the basic method and tools of economic science, especially in constructing Chicago Price Theory. On the other hand, there existed a more disembodied Smith that served a broader intellectual purpose. Characterizing Smith’s works as balancing clear scientific insights with social policy, while questioning the ethics of a version of liberalism often attributed to his thought, was part of an ongoing effort to not only resuscitate the basic principles of markets, but also identify their limits.

This captures not only what I believe to be a right understanding of Smith but also the categories of epistemological error in those misappropriating his work. Adam Smith’s labor theory of value was wrong, yet at the same time his doctrines of self-interest and the invisible hand are indisputably useful in formulating the price mechanism, free exchange of goods and services, limited need for central planning, and spontaneous order. That Smith was not just influential but indispensable for Hayek, Friedman, and Stigler (Austrian and Chicago market theories) is clear. Yet just as the massive contributions of Milton Friedman and other 20thcentury giants misses the normative and philosophical underpinnings desperately needed in a robust understanding of economics, so does their historical treatment of Adam Smith. No, the Chicago school and other market purists of the 20thcentury were not wrong to claim Smith as one of their own regarding the key classical contributions to the social science of economics. But by omission, a failure to interact with Smith’s moral philosophy, a willingness to present economics as a value-free science, added to the same selectivity weakness that many on the other side of the economic divide are guilty of themselves. There is an Adam Smith for everyone, indeed.

I am sympathetic to Liu’s allusions to the idea that 20thcentury market advocates often use Adam Smith “ornamentally.” What sometimes may seem like an plete treatment of Smith may really be the device of implementing him as a “slogan, logo, or symbolic figure.” Liu is fair to Friedman to point out that he did not believe Smith’s doctrine of the invisible hand was “selfish or narrow,” and that the market mechanism Friedman extracted from Smith’s work would “foster conditions for virtuous behavior and an ethic of capitalism centered around individual responsibility, self-reliance, and innovation.” Nevertheless, late 20thcentury depictions of Smith, in line with late 20thcentury market philosophy itself, became increasingly positivistic, rationalist, individualistic, and scientific, and removed from the moral prerequisites that are the hallmark of a holistic understanding of Adam Smith.

I would have been content if Liu had merely concluded the book having demonstrated the irresistible tendency for ideologues of all eras to create the Adam Smith most convenient for their point of view as opposed to wrestling with his vast contributions to multiple integrated disciplines. But whether it was intended to be anecdotal or not, I can’t help but point out how perhaps the closest accuracy in reading Smith was found in the late 20thcentury intellectuals Irving Kristol and Gertrude Himmelfarb, who strike the right chord for the very reason that they fully appreciate the burden that others do not. Kristol connected to the “moral presuppositions for capitalism” so important to Smith. In Smith’s moral philosophy, Kristol saw that markets “could not be indifferent to traditional and distinctly bourgeois virtues, especially those that were instilled and reinforced in the family and organized religion.” Kristol’s reading of Smith pleaded for a rejection of the view that saw man as the “ultimate atom with measurable desires.” Ultimately, Kristol found in Smith the “philosophical underpinnings and intellectual authority” for the real possibilities of market capitalism—“the embeddedness of economic self-interest within wholesome institutions and bourgeois virtues, and the idea that capitalism needed moral, not just economic, advocates.”

This is the contribution of Adam Smith, and 250 years of debate over his legacy and work are testimony to his influence and longevity. What we see in Liu’s book is not multigenerational promised as its purveyors assess Smith by their own presuppositions mitments, but rather the unavoidable reality of all scholarship and intellectual endeavor. We all want our own Adam Smith.

I want Irving Kristol’s Adam Smith for the same reason, though I am prepared to defend that record of Smith empirically and historically. But the real task in front of us may be more solvable than the exact discernment of Adam Smith’s legacy, and it is certainly more consequential. How do we “lay the epistemic foundations for a social theory of markets that promotes freedom”? How do we defend our “vision of a prosperous, free, and flourishing society, embedded in traditional moral values?”

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
7 Figures: Lotteries in America
At The Atlantic, Derek Thompson providessome depressing numbers related to lotteries in America. Here are seven figures you should know from his article: 1. Americans spend more on lottery tickets than on sports tickets, books, video games, movie tickets, and recorded music bined — $70 billion on lotto games in 2014. 2. In five states, people spend more than $600 dollars per person per year on lottery tickets. 3. The poorest third of households buy half of all lotto tickets....
Fighting Human Trafficking With High Tech, Big Data
Human trafficking is a huge problem, morally, economically and legally. One reason it’s so hard to fight it is that it’s a hidden crime. Largely gone are the days when prostitutes hang out on darkened streets. Instead, a girl or woman is pimped out via the internet. Even more difficult, traffickers often use the Deep Web: The term “DeepWeb,” refers to the “deeper” parts of the webthat are accessible, but are considered hard to find because they aren’t indexed by...
Religious Liberty Benefits Everybody
Twenty years ago, religious freedom was an issue that almost everyone agreed on. But more recently, support for religious liberty has tended to divide the country along political lines. Most conservatives still consider it the “first freedom” while many liberals believe religious freedom is less important than advancing a progressive agenda and promoting their understanding of “equality.” What gets lost in the discussion, as Jordan Lorence of Alliance Defending Freedom notes, is that sooner or later everyone benefits from religious...
Samuel Gregg On Free Trade, Trans-Pacific Partnership And The Church
The controversial Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), backed by many Republicans and President Obama, hit a snag Tuesday when key Democrats spoke out against the agreement. What exactly is the TPP? It is a free trade agreement with 12 nations (including China and Japan) that purports to increase economic growth, jobs and free trade. However, there is much opposition in Congress. Leading opponents of the measure in the Senate have pushed for additional protections forU.S. workers and address concerns about alleged foreign-currency...
Religion & Liberty: From Shark Tank to Redemption
The Houston- based Prison Entrepreneurship Program looks at convicted criminals as if they were “raw metal in the hands of a blacksmith – crude, formless, and totally moldable.” PEP puts prisoners through a rigorous character training and business skills regimen to prepare them for a productive, even flourishing, re-entry to life after incarceration. Ray Nothstine took part in PEP’s “pitch day” presentations where prisoners test their start-up dreams before a panel of business people and investors. He describes his day...
Senate Approves Religious Freedom Measure for Trade Bill
Yesterday the U.S. Senate voted 92-0 to approve an amendment which adds a religious liberty provision to the overall negotiating objectives outlined in Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). The addition wouldrequire the Administration to take religious freedom into account whenever negotiating trade agreements within the partnership. During a floor speech on the amendment earlier tonight, Senator James Lankford’s (R-OK)said, “Our greatest export is our American value. The dignity of each person, hard work, innovation, and liberty. That’s what we send around the...
Are Churches Failing The Poor?
For those in poverty, or those simply facing tough times, churches are often places they turn to for help. It may be organized aid: soup kitchens and food pantries. It may be a gas card given to a single mom who is struggling to get from one pay day to another. But if that es with merely a handout, and no spiritual support, is the church failing the poor? Ross Douthat says so. In his May 16 column for The...
How to Help Syrian Refugees
I attended an informative — and very moving — presentation yesterday on the humanitarian relief effort underway in Syria, Lebanon and Jordan. The talk was given here in Grand Rapids by Mark Ohanian, director of programs for International Orthodox Christian Charities (see my podcast with him here). What I learned was that despite the massive scale of human suffering, the crisis is likely to get much worse. Given the gains that the Islamic State is making in Iraq, that might...
The Myth of Homo Economicus
“As a social psychologist, I have long been amused by economists and their curiously delusional notion of the ‘rational man.’” writes Carol Tavris. “Rational? Where do these folks live?” In a review of behavioral economist Richard Thaler’s new book, Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioral Economics, Tavris notes how economists are slowly beginning to see — or, one could argue, finally returning to the notion — that the discipline ought treat man as more than a mere robot or calculator. “Researchers...
The Moral Mess Of Myanmar
Greed. Lust. Corruption. Thirst for power. A wretched lack passion for human life. That is Myanmar. Myanmar is home to 1.3 million Rohingya, a religious and cultural minority in what was once known as Burma. The Myanmar government staunchly refuses to recognize the citizenship of the Rohingya, claiming they are all illegal immigrants of neighboring Bangladesh, despite the fact that many Rohingya families have lived exclusively in Myanmar for generations. This lack of citizenship makes the Rohingya vulnerable to trafficking,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved