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Introduction. Corruption and the rise of the fiscal state
The introduction sets out the aims of the work in the context of state-building theories and reviews the current state of literature on the definitions and practices of corruption, which it seeks to historicise. It surveys the main conclusions of the various chapters and proposes a typology of the relationship between private interests and public good in early modern Europe, in an age of major change and conflict which saw the rise of the fiscal state
Playing Herself: âIt was not as an actress but as herself, that she charmed every oneâ
Self-interest in the thought of Adam Ferguson
Adam Ferguson (1723â1816) was a prominent member of the Scottish Enlightenment. His most famous work An Essay on the History of Civil Society (1767) has often been read as a dissenting voice from the positive view of commerce found in the work of his friends Adam Smith and David Hume. Readings of Ferguson tend to focus on the Essay and to see him as either a civic republican worried about the impact of commerce on citizenship, or as a precursor to Marxian ideas of alienation and the anti-social impact of economic development. This paper argues against both of these interpretations, and against the practice of reading Ferguson through the Essay alone. Taking his discussion of self-interest as its focus, the paper shows how, in Fergusonâs other writings, he develops a complex and nuanced understanding of the place of self-interest in moral and political life. Central to this is Fergusonâs concept of ambition: an idea crucial to his moral philosophy and one which places Ferguson at the heart of eighteenth century debates about the nature of self-regarding behaviour