On the Other (Invisible) Hand
Anthony Brewer
History of Political Economy, 2009, vol. 41, issue 3, 519-543
Abstract:
The invisible hand as it appears in the Theory of Moral Sentiments is commonly treated as an afterthought in discussions of the version in the Wealth of Nations, but it deserves attention in its own right. I will argue that there is an entirely coherent (if not entirely plausible) economic argument underpinning the invisible hand of the Theory of Moral Sentiments. It is quite different from the invisible hand argument of the Wealth of Nations, not because of any conflict but because they address different questions. The argument in the Theory of Moral Sentiments allowed Smith to maintain an ironic distance from the inequality and greed that he saw around him while arguing that it did no harm, and allowed him to resolve, at least to his own satisfaction, an age-old debate about the ethical and political consequences of luxury consumption. Some of these themes were further developed in the Wealth of Nations, but without the phrase 'invisible hand', which was switched to a different part of the argument.
Keywords: insivible hand; Theory of Moral Sentiments; Wealth of Nations (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2009
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Working Paper: On the other (invisible) hand (2006) 
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