Lectures on Jurisprudence
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Lectures on Jurisprudence, also called Lectures on Justice, Police, Revenue and Arms (1763) is a collection of Adam Smith's lectures, comprising notes taken from his early lectures. It contains the formative ideas behind The Wealth of Nations.{{Citation |last=Smith |first=Adam |year=1976 |editor1=Meek, Ronald L.|editor1-link= Ronald L. Meek |editor2=Raphael, David D. |editor2-link= D. D. Raphael|editor3=Stein G. Peter |editor3-link= Peter Stein (legal scholar) |title= Lectures on Jurisprudence |edition=1 |publisher= Oxford University Press |publication-date=1976 |location= Oxford }}See also {{Citation |editor-last= Cannan |editor-first=Edwin |editor-link= Edwin Cannan|title= Lectures on Justice, Police, Revenue and Arms delivered in the University of Glasgow by Adam Smith and reported by a Student in 1763 |edition=First |publisher= Clarendon Press |date=1896 |location= Oxford |url=https://archive.org/stream/lecturesonjustic00smituoft#page/n7/mode/2up |access-date=2012-12-14 }}
Background
Published as part of the 1976 Glasgow Edition of the works and correspondence of Adam Smith. It consists of two sets of lecture notes that were apparently taken from Smith's lectures of the 1760s, along with an 'Early Draft' of The Wealth of Nations. The same material had also appeared as An Early Draft of Part of The Wealth of Nations and as Lectures on Justice, Police, Revenue and Arms.
Summary
Smith’s Lectures on Jurisprudence, originally delivered at the University of Glasgow in 1762–1763, present his ‘theory of the rules by which civil government ought to be directed.’ The chief purpose of government, according to Smith, is to preserve justice; and ‘the object of justice is security from injury.’{{Cite web |title=Lectures on Jurisprudence {{!}} Adam Smith Works |url=https://www.adamsmithworks.org/documents/lectures-on-jurisprudence |access-date=2024-05-23 |website=www.adamsmithworks.org |language=en}} The state must protect the individual’s right to his person, property, reputation, and social relations. Smith elsewhere specifically defines the term jurisprudence as "the theory of general principles of law and government". It is also defined as the general guidelines about the essence of a nation's laws.{{Cite journal|last=Hasbach|first=W.|date=1897|title=Adam Smith's Lectures on Justice, Police, Revenue and Arms|journal=Political Science Quarterly|volume=12|issue=4|pages=684–698|doi=10.2307/2139691|jstor=2139691}} In the lectures, Smith contends that every system of law aims for, and thus jurisprudence can be divided into, "the maintenance of justice, the provision of police in order to promote opulence, the raising of revenue, and the establishment of arms for the defence of the state".{{Cite book |title=The Glasgow Edition of the Works and Correspondence of Adam Smith, Vol. 5: Lectures on Jurisprudence |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1762 |isbn=9780198281887 |editor-last=Meek |editor-first=R.. L. |publication-date=1978 |pages=11 |chapter=Introduction |editor-last2=Raphael |editor-first2=D. D. |editor-last3=Stein |editor-first3=P. G.}}
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=Part I: Of Justice=
- Division I. Of Public Jurisprudence
- Division II. Domestic Law
- Division III. Private Law
=Part II: Of Police=
The pros and cons of money, prices, and financial exchanges fall under this section of the Lectures "since the regulation of prices and the creation of money by the state both came under the head of police."{{Cite journal|last=Caldwell|first=William|date=March 1897|title=Lectures on Justice, Police, Revenue, and Arms, Delivered in the University of Glasgow. Edwin Cannan , Adam Smith|journal=Journal of Political Economy|volume=5|issue=2|pages=250–258|doi=10.1086/250422|issn=0022-3808|doi-access=free}}
- Division I. Cleanliness and Security
- Division II. Cheapness or PlentyThis part engendered the beginning of The Wealth of Nations
=Part III: Of Revenue=
=Part IV: Of Arms=
=Part V: Of the Laws of Nations=
Scholarly critique
According to William Caldwell, the lectures accomplish three goals: they detail Smith's philosophy and beliefs about economics, they explain his motivation to write about the historical origins of political societies, and they show the influence of mercantilism and Francis Hutcheson on Smith's thoughts on the political economy. In an article for Political Science Quarterly, {{ill|Wilhelm Hasbach|de|Wilhelm Hasbach}} opines that Smith believed that the political economy is the foundation for morality, law, government, wealth, revenue, and arms, a position that originated from the idea of natural law. He also notes that Smith's relationship with the physiocrats is important in the Lectures and that some critics state that Smith produced the same concepts as the physiocrats on economics. Hasbach also states that Smith expands on physiocratic ideas by advocating a freedom of industry. Smith expects that industry - and also commerce - be laisser-faire and relevant to all aspects of political economics. Another scholar, C. F. Bastable, notes that Smith recognizes the need for industry for the production of wealth. Industry creates capital which is much needed in an economically viable society.{{Cite journal|last= BASTABLE|first=C. F.|date= 1898 |title=ADAM SMITH'S LECTURES ON "JURISPRUDENCE"|journal= Hermathena |volume= 10|issue= 24|pages=200–211|jstor= 23036559}}
Hasbach has also written that the Lectures offer a perspective of Smith's view on property that differs from that of John Locke. Smith believes that property does not lie within the individual but rather that it ought to be shared within society. "The individual and his labor are in no respect the ultimate source of the right of property in land: the origin of this right is in society." Also, according to Hasbach, Smith rejects a state of nature and the doctrine on an original contract, two ideas supported by Locke.
Notes
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External links
- [http://oll.libertyfund.org/titles/2621 Lectures on Justice, Police, Revenue and Arms on OLL]
- [https://archive.org/stream/lecturesonjustic00smituoft#page/n7/mode/2up Lectures on Justice, Police, Revenue and Arms on archive.org]
{{Adam Smith}}
Category:1976 non-fiction books