Adam Smith Said Colonists Should Join the British Union. Was He Serious?
Reading between the lines of The Wealth of Nations
Reading between the lines of The Wealth of Nations
Smith appreciated the beauty and allure of intricate systems.
The so-called father of capitalism was not available for comment, so we talked to another economist, Adam C. Smith.
A 1926 lecture captures timeless truths about the Scottish thinker.
Adam Smith recognized that man has a natural "propensity to truck, barter, and exchange."
The thinker's views of human sympathy, beneficence, justice, and the division of labor still resonate.
The libertarian creator of alternative comix Hate and Neat Stuff explains why he's fond of the invisible hand and individualism.
The Scottish thinker's famous friendship with David Hume demonstrates his liberalism, not his atheism.
The ghost of the so-called father of economics chastises those who would use his words for their own misbegotten ends.
Stop quoting him out of context on taxation, education, and monopoly.
From the American Founders to communist meme creators, people have long claimed Smith's endorsement for their ideas.
"The greatest thing that ever happened to me was to be born in a free country of modest means and to have opportunities," says the Nobel Prize–winning economist.
Plus: Would Adam Smith be a libertarian if he were alive today?
Plus: Adam Smith invented the social software for modern liberalism, the U.K. invites more skilled immigrants, and more...
Peter Suderman, Len Gilroy, and C. Boyden Gray diagnose the country's many fiscal woes, and offer some solutions, at Reason's 50th anniversary celebration.
The Pontiff ought to stick to flock-tending and lay off capitalism.