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Adam Smith
Economist and Philosopher
1723 - 1790 |
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Adam Smith was born in Kirkcaldy, Fife, Scotland. The exact
date of his birth is unknown, however, he was baptized on
June 5, 1723. Smith was the Scottish political economist
and philosopher, who became famous for his influential book
"The Wealth of Nations" written in 1776.
In 1751 Smith was appointed professor
of logic at Glasgow university, transferring in
1752 to the chair of moral philosophy. His lectures covered
the field of ethics, rhetoric, jurisprudence and political
economy, or "police and revenue." In 1759 he published
his Theory of Moral Sentiments, embodying
some of his Glasgow lectures. This work was about those
standards of ethical conduct that hold society together,
with emphasis on the general harmony of human motives and
activities under a beneficent Providence.
Smith moved to London in 1776, where he published
"An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the
Wealth of Nations," which examined in detail
the consequences of economic freedom. It covered such concepts
as the role of self-interest, the division of labor, the
function of markets, and the international implications
of a laissez-faire economy. "Wealth of Nations"
established economics as an autonomous subject and launched
the economic doctrine of free enterprise.
Smith laid the intellectual framework
that explained the free market and still holds true today.
He is most often recognized for the expression "the
invisible hand," which he used to demonstrate
how self-interest guides the most efficient use of resources
in a nation's economy, with public welfare coming as a by-product.
To underscore his laissez-faire convictions, Smith argued
that state and personal efforts, to promote social good
are ineffectual compared to unbridled market forces.
In 1778 he was appointed to a post of commissioner
of customs in Edinburgh, Scotland. He died there on July
17, 1790, after an illness. At the end it was discovered
that Smith had devoted a considerable part of his income
to numerous secret acts of charity.
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