Professor Jacob T. Levy, who occupies with distinction the
opposite end of the political spectrum from my natural hangout, posts this
comment on my hatchet example: “A fine
old Smithian/ market liberal/ libertarian point about the wonders of the
division of labor! ;-)” which emoticon Google
tells me means a smirk but which I choose to interpret as an ironic smile. There is, however, a deeper truth here, one
that modern thinkers frequently miss.
Adam Smith was the first great Classical Political Economist. Karl Marx, in my judgment, was the last and
greatest Classical Political Economist.
They shared, with David Ricardo and other luminaries, an interest in
class conflict and the conditions of economic growth, two questions that were shoved
aside by the marginalist Triple Revolution of Jevons, Menger, and Walras in the
1870s. As many commentators before me
have observed, the political spectrum is shaped like a horseshoe, with the ends
closer to one another than either end is to the middle.
All of which whets my appetite. I'm looking forward to your Columbia lecture, but I really would enjoy a series on Marx.
ReplyDeleteIndeed, a winking smile, not a smirk, since I trust that we're all sharing the joke.
ReplyDelete