Law, self-interest, and the Smithian conscience

This essay examines how law understands and engages with self-interest. After examining the turn to voluntarism and away from a jurisdiction of conscience in recent law and legal theory, it moves attention to intellectual history, and examines the work of Adam Smith in ethics, economics and jurispru...

全面介绍

书目详细资料
主要作者: Getzler, J
其他作者: Del Mar, M
格式: Book section
语言:English
出版: Hart Publishing 2016
实物特征
总结:This essay examines how law understands and engages with self-interest. After examining the turn to voluntarism and away from a jurisdiction of conscience in recent law and legal theory, it moves attention to intellectual history, and examines the work of Adam Smith in ethics, economics and jurisprudence, where a theory of conscience based on sympathy is used to explain self-interest and to provide the ground of an original ethical system. Evidence is then adduced that lawyers in Chancery in the decades immediately following Smith’s theorising came to think in similar terms, perhaps directly influenced by Smith’s arguments.