Growing, innovating, convincing, approving: intellectual stimuli from Adam Smith
Giorgio Rampa ()
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Giorgio Rampa: Department of Economics and Quantitative Methods, University of Pavia
No 107, Quaderni di Dipartimento from University of Pavia, Department of Economics and Quantitative Methods
Abstract:
It is argued that, differently from a diffuse practice among modern economists, one needs reading more than the first couple of pages of the Wealth of Nations in order to fully appreciate Smith’s contribution to the economics of exchange, innovation and economic evolution. In particular, by going back to the History of Astronomy, the First Formation of Languages and the Theory of Moral Sentiments, one finds that in Smith’s opinion any kind of social order (languages, theories, social norms, evaluation of products) stems from a co-evolution process. Evolution is fostered by “surprise and imagination”, i.e. by dissatisfaction with some existing order; however imagination (that is, innovation) can only be successful if it is approved by the community; approval, in turn, is grounded on uses, customs, moods. As a consequence, there is no guarantee that evolution is progressive. More important, self-reference and the very mechanisms of imagination (from sudden surprise to sudden invention to successful new knowledge links) imply that evolution is characterised by highly ‘non-linear’ relations. It follows that, as usual in non-linear theory, there does not exist a unique path of development for a society, nor one which depends uniquely on “fundamental” parameters. Some of Smith’s key notions -like specialization, division of labour, effectual demand, propensity to exchange, self interest, prosperity- can be read from this different perspective, leading to an interpretation which is differs deeply from the one usually adopted by modern economics.
JEL-codes: B31 D83 O10 O31 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 19 pages
Date: 2009-12
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