[PDF] Index to the Works of Adam Smith



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Index to the Works of Adam Smith

This volume includes two reports of Smith’s course together with the ‘Early Draft’ of part of the Wealth of Nations vi CORRESPONDENCE OF ADAM SMITH Edited by e c mossner and i s ross Associated volumes: ESSAYS ON ADAM SMITH Edited by a s skinner and t wilson LIFE OF ADAM SMITH By i s ross ADAM SMITH LIBRARY: A CATALOGUE By h mizuta



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Index to the Works of Adam Smith

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THE GLASGOW EDITION OF THE WORKS AND

CORRESPONDENCE OF ADAM SMITH

Commissioned by the University of Glasgow to celebrate the bicentenary of the Wealth of Nations i

THE THEORY OF MORAL SENTIMENTS

Edited by d. d. raphaeland a. l. macÞe

ii

AN INQUIRY INTO THE NATURE AND CAUSES

OF THE WEALTH OF NATIONS

Edited by r. h. campbelland a. s. skinner; textual editor w. b. todd iii

ESSAYS ON PHILOSOPHICAL SUBJECTS

(and Miscellaneous Pieces)

Edited by w. p. d. wightman

iv

LECTURES ON RHETORIC AND BELLES LETTRES

Edited byj. c. bryce

This volume includes the Considerations concerning the

First Formation of Languages

v

LECTURES ON JURISPRUDENCE

Edited by r. l. meek, d. d. raphael, andp. g. stein This volume includes two reports of Smith's course together with the 'Early Draft' of part of the Wealth of Nations vi

CORRESPONDENCE OF ADAM SMITH

Edited by e. c. mossnerand i. s. ross

Associated volumes:

ESSAYS ON ADAM SMITH

Edited by a. s. skinnerand t. wilson

LIFE OF ADAM SMITH

Byi. s. ross

ADAM SMITH LIBRARY: A CATALOGUE

By h. mizuta

The Glasgow Edition of the Works and Correspondence of Adam Smith and the associated volumes are published in hardcover by Oxford University Press. The six titles of the Glasgow Edition and the Index, but not the associated volumes, are published in paperback by Liberty Fund.

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Index to the Works of

ADAM SMITH

compiled by k. haakonssen and a. s. skinner

LIBERTY FUND

INDIANAPOLIS

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This book is published by Liberty Fund, Inc., a foundation established to encourage study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals. The cuneiform inscription that serves as our logo and as the design motif for our endpapers is the earliest-known written appearance of the word "freedom" (amagi), or "liberty." It is taken from a clay document written about 2300 b.c. in the Sumerian city-state of Lagash.

This reprint has been authorized by the Oxford

University Press.

© Oxford University Press 2001

All rights reserved

Printed in the United States of America

10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 p 5 4 3 2 1

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Index to the works of Adam Smith/compiled by K. Haakonssen and A.S. Skinner. p. cm. Originally published: Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2001. isbn 0-86597-388-1(pbk.: alk. paper)

1.Smith, Adam 1723Ð1790 - Indexes.2.Economists - Great

Britain. I. Haakonssen, Knud, 1947- II. Skinner, Andrew S. hb103.s6 i53 2002

330.15

′3 - dc21 2002066089

Liberty Fund, Inc.,

8335Allison Pointe Trail, Suite 300

Indianapolis, Indiana 46250-1684

This book is printed on paper that is acid-free and meets the requirements of the American National Standard for Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, z39.48-1992. Cover design adapted by Erin Kirk New, Watkinsville, Georgia, based on a design by JMH Corporation, Indianapolis, Indiana

Printed and bound by Worzalla Publishing Company,

Stevens Point, Wisconsin

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Contents

Introductionvii

LECTURES ON RHETORIC AND

BELLES LETTRES

Index of Subjects?

Index of Persons?

ESSAYS ON PHILOSOPHICAL SUBJECTS

Index of Subjects??

Index of Persons??

THE THEORY OF MORAL SENTIMENTS

Index of Subjects??

Index of Persons??

LECTURES ON JURISPRUDENCE

AND APPENDIX

Index of Subjects??

Index of Persons??

Index of Acts of the English and

United Kingdom Parliaments???

Index of Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland???

Original Index to Report dated ???? ???

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WEALTH OF NATIONS

Index of Subjects???

Index of Persons???

Index of Statutes???

Index of the Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland???

Original Index???

viContents

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Introduction

In writing his introduction to the Lectures on Jurisprudence, Edwin Cannan recorded the extraordinary way in which the manuscript of these notes had been discovered: On April ??, Mr. Charles C. Maconochie, whom I then met for the first time, hap- pened to be present when, in course of conversation with the literary editor of the Oxford Magazine, I had occasion to make some comment about Adam Smith. Mr. Maconochie immediately said that he possessed a manuscript report of Adam Smith's lectures on jurisprudence, which he regarded as of considerable interest. (Cannan, ????, p. xv.)

Cannan's reaction may be imagined.

More than sixty years later, John Lothian accidentally discovered, at an auction held in Aberdeen, two sets of lecture notes as delivered by Smith. The first set were notes of the lectures on jurisprudence given by Smith in the session ????-??, that is in the session preceding the version edited by

Cannan. Lothian observed:

The second set of manuscripts, in two volumes, similarly bound but with leather tips to protect the corners, carried on the spine of each volume in neat handwriting the inscription, 'Notes of Dr. Smith's Rhetoric Lectures'. These manuscripts proved to be an almost complete set of a student's notes on part of Smith's course on Moral Philosophy given in ????-??. (Lothian, ????, p. xii.) The Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettreswere edited by Lothian in ????. Both sets were subsequently purchased by the University of Glasgow and were to become key elements in the decision to proceed with editions of these works and the other volumes. The edition was formally embarked upon in the early ????s and completed twenty years later with the publica- tion of John Bryce's edition of the Rhetoric. The completion of the edition was secured financially when the Liberty Fund undertook a paperback version of the entire work. This decision effectively provided access for a very wide audience. Wider access to the series prompted the belief that it would be appropri- ate to produce a general index to the Worksas a whole. As I recall, I offered this suggestion to the Liberty Fund some fifteen years ago. The Fund agreed both to support the project and to the suggestion that the indexers should include Knud Haakonssen. While we have joint responsibility for the outcome, Knud Haakonssen's main task was with Smith's ethical and jurisprudential material, while I mostly took care of the remaining areas and the task of co-ordinating the volume as a whole.

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In this context we would wish to acknowledge a debt to Professor Drummond Bone, formerly of the Department of English Literature in the University of Glasgow, and now Vice-Chancellor of Royal Holloway, University of London. Professor Bone identified a colleague, Dr. Peter Cochrane, who was to give us invaluable advice with regard to the indexes to the Rhetoric, and to those other literary works which were first published in the Essays on Philosophical Subjects. We began the work using traditional and manual techniques, before being introduced to the advantages of modern computer technology. In Glasgow University this development was the result of advice received from Professor Richard Trainor, now Vice-Chancellor of the University of Greenwich, who in turn introduced us to Dr. Thomas Munck, head of the Computing Unit in the Faculty of Arts. We are indebted to Dr. Munck and to his team who helped check the texts for keywords to be used in the index. While we have not sought to produce a concordance, nonetheless the flow of information generated by responses from the Computing Unit was so great as to become almost unmanageable. We were forced to the conclu- sion, for example, that the fact that Smith mentioned the term 'capital' on ???occasions in the Wealth of Nationsmight not of itself be very helpful. Accordingly, we have sought a compromise which, we hope, will give the indexes as a whole greater descriptive power. This index is to Smith's Worksand does not include the Correspondence, although there are cross-references to this material. Each index is separate on the ground that the works involved are very different in terms of focus. Each includes an index of subjects and of persons. For the sake of conveni- ence, the indexes include the lists of statutes prepared by the editors of the Lectures on Jurisprudenceand of the Wealth of Nationswhere the main contributors were P. G. Stein (LJ) and R. H. Campbell (WN). We have in- cluded the original manuscript index to the Lectures on Jurisprudenceas in the Glasgow edition, on the ground that this is a document of importance in its own right. The volume also contains a copy of the index which was added to the third edition of the Wealth of Nations. The index may have been added as a result of criticism from Hugh Blair (Correspondence, letter ???) and from William Robertson who noted that: As your Book must necessarily become a Political or Commercial Code to all Europe, which must be often consulted both by men of Practice and Speculation, I should wish that in the ?d Edition you would give a copious index. (Correspondence, letter ???.) The first index is reprinted following the original, but with cross- references to the present version. Whoever the author of the original index may have been, it is a remark- able document, notable for its sensitivity to many of Smith's major themes. Interestingly, the same quality is evident in the index to Sir James Steuart's viiiIntroductionquotesdbs_dbs4.pdfusesText_8