The Wealth of Nations_ Books 4-5 - Adam Smith [24]
2, ‘The Discovery of the Circular Flow of Economic Life’.
11. J. A. Schumpeter, History of Economic Analysis (1954), pp.241–3.
12. Meek (1962), p.18.
13. Meek (1962), p.108.
14. Meek (1962), p.374.
15. Meek (1962), p.70.
16. Meek (1962), p.19.
17. Meek (1962), pp.109–14.
18. Meek (1962), pp.231–62.
19. WN, IV.ix.29; p.260.
20. See R. L. Meek, Turgot on Progress, Sociology and Economics (1973).
21. Smith possessed a run of the Éphémérides du Citoyen, which included the first two-thirds of the Reflections on the Formation and Distribution of Riches. I have used as my source R. L. Meek, Turgot on Progress, Sociology and Economics (1973).
22. Meek (1973), p.122.
23. Meek (1973), p.147.
24. Meek (1973), p.123.
25. Meek (1973), p.127.
26. Meek (1973), p.128.
27. Meek (1973), p.127.
28. Meek (1973), p.122.
29. Meek (1973), p.153.
30. Meek (1973), p.153.
31. Meek (1973), p.155.
32. Meek (1973), pp.156–7.
33. Meek (1973), p.138.
34. See Peter Groenewegen, ‘Turgot and Adam Smith’, Scottish Journal of Political Economy (1969). Also the same author’s ‘The French Connection: Some Studies of French Influences on British Economics in the Eighteenth Century’, Working Papers in Economics, University of Sydney, 202 (1994).
35. Turgot’s para LXXXIII.
36. Meek (1973), p.170; see Turgot’s paras LXXI, LXXIV.
37. Meek (1973), p.172.
38. Meek (1973), p.172.
39. W. Walker Stephens, Life and Writings of Turgot (1895), p.233.
40. Henry Higgs, Cantillon’s Essai (1931), p.385.
41. W. Walker Stephens, Life and Writings of Turgot (1895), p.62.
42. Meek (1973), p.312.
43. WN, IV.ix.6; p.249.
44. WN, IV.ix.6; p.249.
45. WN, IV.ix.5; p.249.
46. WN, IV.ix.7; p.250.
47. WN, IV.ix.10; p.251.
48. WN, IV.ix.10; p.251.
49. Edwin Cannan, ed., Adam Smith’s Lectures on Justice, Police, Revenue and Arms (1896), p.xxiv.
50. WN, I.vi.
51. R. L. Meek, Economics and Ideology and Other Essays, (1967), pp.31–2.
52. Edwin Cannan, ed., Adam Smith’s Lectures on Justice, Police, Revenue and Arms (1896), p xxxi.
53. WN, II.ii.
54. Edwin Cannan, ed., Adam Smith’s Lectures on Justice, Police, Revenue and Arms (1896), p xxix.
55. J.A. Schumpeter, History of Economic Analysis (1954), p.232.
56. M. Palyi, ‘The Introduction of Adam Smith on the Continent’, in Adam Smith, 1776–1926 (1928). See also J. H. Hollander, ‘The Dawn of a Science: The Founder of a School’, in the same volume.
57. Murray Rothbard, Economic Thought Before Adam Smith (1995), p.403.
58. Donald Winch, ‘Nationalism and Cosmopolitanism in the Early History of Economic Thought’, in Manuela Albertone and Alberto Masoero, eds, Political Economy and National Realities (1994), p 102.
59. Quoted ibid, p.103.
60. Quoted ibid, p.95.
61. Edwin Cannan, ed., Adam Smith’s Lectures on Justice, Police, Revenue and Arms (1896), p xxiii.
62. WN, IV.ix.38; p.264.
63. ‘Astronomy’, Section IV, paragraph 19.
64. Meek (1962), p.370.
65. Mercantilism and the East India Trade (1926), p.3.
66. Eli Hecksher, Mercantilism (1955), Vol. 1, p.28.
67. The Politics of Mercantilism (1942), p.35.
68. On the History of Economic Thought: British and American Economic Essays (1993), p.46.
69. Eli Hecksher, Mercantilism (1955), Vol. 2, p.274.
70. WN, IV.ix.3; p.248.
71. D. C. Coleman, ed., Revisions in Mercantilism (1969), p.15.
72. Corr, letter 208, October 1780.
73. WN, IV.i.10; p.10.
74. WN, IV.iii.c.9; p.72.
75. WN, IV.i.17; p.14.
76. WN, IV.ii.c.2; p.67.
77. WN, IV.vi.13; p.128.
78. WN, IV.iii.a.4; p.52
79. WN, IV.iii.c.13; p.75.
80. Lectures, p. 269.
81. A. W. Coats On the History of Economic Thought (1993), p.140.
82. WN, IV.i.35; p.27.
83. WN, IV.i.45; p.28.
84. WN, IV.ii.3; p.30.
85. WN, IV.v.a.24ff; p.94.
86. WN, IV.vii.c.89; p.214.
87. Lectures, pp. 233–4.
88. WN, II.v.
89. WN, III.i.
90. Thomas Pownall, A Letter from Governor Pownall to Adam Smith, being an Examination of Several Points