Description
Key events, from the Recoinage crisis in the 1690s to the South Sea Bubble in the 1720s and the consequences of the French Revolution, sharpened the need for a more dynamic conception of economic forces in the midst of the Financial Revolution. Political economy emerged as a disruptive force, challenging philosophers to debate and define unstable phenomena in a new climate of expanding credit, innovation in money form, political change and international competition. In Money and political economy in the Enlightenment contributors investigate received critical assumptions about what was progressive and what was backward-looking, and reconsider traditional attempts to periodise the Enlightenment. Major questions explored include:
- the impact of economic and political crises on philosophy;
- transitions from mercantilist to 'classical' analyses of the market;
- the challenge of reviving ancient republicanism on the foundations of a modern commercial system, with its inherent social inequalities.
Reviews
Reviews'[In this book] there is a tight connection between Enlightenment ideas and the historical context in which they were originally offered [...] almost without exception, the scholarship is of high quality.'
French History
Book Information
ISBN 9780729411387
Author Daniel Carey
Format Paperback
Page Count 272
Imprint Voltaire Foundation
Publisher Liverpool University Press
Weight(grams) 400g
Dimensions(mm) 234mm * 156mm * 20mm