Of Course We’re Still Reading Wealth of Nations at Econlib
Today, we’re our joint celebration with our friends at Liberty Matters of the 250th anniversary of the publication of An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations through a series of six weekly essays.
In this final essay, Craig Smith asks about Wealth of Nations’ legacy and what we can still get from a 250-year-old book today. From the article:
The anniversary of the publication of the Wealth of Nations gives us cause to pause and consider what Adam Smith achieved in writing that book. He is, as the commonplace goes, the founding father of economics, and the fact that we are marking the publication of his great book, and in doing so acknowledging its impact on the development of that discipline, is a concrete symbol of his lasting achievement.
In our times it seems that there are two common responses to the anniversary of a ‘great’ book.
We hope you’ll check out the whole article, which you can find here.
(In case you missed it, check out the first essay in the series, by Eric Schliesser, the second, by Maria Pia Paganelli, the third, from Dennis C. Rasmussen, the fourth, by Brianne Wolf, and the fifth, by Jacob T. Levy.)
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