Document Type

Book

Publication Date

9-14-2023

Abstract

We present a semantic and textual analysis of the first two chapters of the Wealth of Nations to elucidate the meaning of several of Adam Smith’s key ideas. Using the methodology of the Natural Semantic Metalanguage, we produce semantic explications of some of Adam Smith’s fundamental principles of economics phrased in simple and cross-translatable words. The extracts from the original text function as textual evidence and conceptual reference for the explications we present. We demonstrate that: (i) by reducing the principles as conceived by Smith to their core meanings, it is possible to resolve some interpretive ambiguities for general readers of economics, and (ii) by producing explications that are clear, cross-translatable, and free from terminological ethnocentrism, these principles become accessible and maximally intelligible to twenty-first-century readers who are nonexperts in economics and nonnative speakers of English, too. Ultimately, our project re-humanizes economics as a study of the human condition by drilling down to the core of what Adam Smith the moral philosopher meant in his most famous book that founded a discipline.

Comments

In Paul Sagar (Ed.), Interpreting Adam Smith: Critical Essays.

Copyright

The editor

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