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11 Jan 2023 • Journal Article • Journal of the History of Economic Thought
Adam Smith and the Wealth-Worshipping Spectator
AbstractWhat explains the ambition to get rich? Adam Smith is clear that commercial ambition, the passionate desire for great wealth, is not simply a desire to satisfy one’s material needs. His argument on what underlies it, however, is not obvious. I review three possibilities suggested by Smith’s work and the scholarly literature—vanity, the love of system, and the desire
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Mar 2022 • Journal Article • Modern Intellectual History
The Downfall of All Slavish Hierarchies: Richard Price on Emancipation, Improvement, and Republican Utopia
AbstractScholars have been paying increasing attention to the republican theory of liberty developed by the eighteenth-century British radical Richard Price. This article studies his narrative of a revolution of liberty, which consists in the downfall of oppressive powers, the establishment of republican institutions, and the introduction of a utopian age. In distinction from
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20 Jul 2021 • Journal Article • Intellectual History Review
Adam Smith and the idea of free government
AbstractThis article reconstructs Adam Smith’s contribution to the conversation on the nature and value of free government in the eighteenth century. Smith contributes to this conversation in two ways. First, by embedding the idea of free government in a narrative of the progress of government, which traces the interplay between natural progress and social circumstances, and
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3 May 2021 • Journal Article • The Review of Politics
Adam Smith on Impartial Patriotism
AbstractScholars have emphasized Adam Smith's critique of the dangers of patriotism, but have not paid close attention to its potential value. This article recovers from Smith's work an attractive model of patriotism without nationalism. The potential value of patriotism lies in inspiring individuals to realize an ideal of impartial beneficence, which consists in overcoming
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3 Dec 2020 • Journal Article • Journal of Political Ideologies
How did negative liberty become a liberal ideal?
AbstractThis article aims to situate Isaiah Berlin’s influential conceptualization of the liberal idea of liberty in negative terms in the history of political ideologies, thus contributing to the understanding of the development of liberalism as an ideological tradition. More specifically, the article contributes to the understanding of two central themes in the ideological
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31 Jan 2020 • Journal Article • Citizenship Studies
Ethnicizing the republic: the strange career of the concept of republican citizenship in Israel
AbstractThe scholarship on republicanism has moved away from perfectionist and communitarian to neo-Roman interpretations of the tradition, but the scholarship on citizenship in Israel has taken a different turn: republican citizenship has come to be identified with an unusual, ethnicized conception of it, sometimes described as ‘ethnorepublicanism’. This article critically
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May 2019 • Book Chapter • Republicanism and the Future of Democracy
Introduction: Republicanizing Democracy, Democratizing the Republic
AbstractRepublicanism and democracy have had a long and fraught relationship. The idea of the republic, a regime that is the common concern of a people (Cicero 2008 , 18, 75), was arguably shaped in opposition not only to monarchy but also to democracy (Urbinati 2012 ). Many republicans understood democracy as the licentious, violent, and unstable rule of an irrational multitude
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May 2019 • Edited Volume
Republicanism and the Future of Democracy
AbstractDemocracies are in crisis. Can republican theory contribute to reforming our political norms and institutions? The 'neo-republican turn' has seen scholars using the classical republican tradition in reconstructing and developing a vision of public life as an alternative to liberalism. This volume offers new perspectives from leading scholars on how republicanism can
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