Wildy Logo
(020) 7242 5778
enquiries@wildy.com

Book of the Month

Cover of Housing Law Handbook

Housing Law Handbook

Price: £85.00

Planning Law:
A Practitioner's
Handbook 2nd ed




 William Webster, Robert Weatherley


Welcome to Wildys

Watch


Corporate Insolvency Practice:
Litigation, Procedure
and Precedents 3rd ed




 Mark Watson-Gandy


Offers for Newly Called Barristers & Students

Special Discounts for Newly Called & Students

Read More ...


Secondhand & Out of Print

Browse Secondhand Online

Read More...


David Hume and Adam Smith on Law and Justice


ISBN13: 9781399515191
To be Published: January 2027
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £95.00





Analyses the legal and jurisprudential writings of David Hume and Adam Smith

  • First comprehensive study of the legal aspects within Hume’s and Smith’s writings
  • Discussion of Hume’s and Smith’s moral philosophy, concept of justice, and, in connection, law
  • Examination of property and contract law within Hume’s and Smith’s understanding of moral philosophy and of law
  • Discussion of Hume’s and Smith’s political theory, moral philosophy and law: family and government, and trade

Andreas Rahmatian presents the first comprehensive study of the legal aspects of Hume’s and Smith’s writings. The Scottish Enlightenment was considerably legal or jurisprudential in its moral and social or political philosophy. Yet until now, David Hume and Adam Smith’s considerable body of legal texts – both with regard to technical (private) law and legal and political philosophy – have been neglected by lawyers and philosophers, political theorists and historians of political thought.

By focusing on the legal aspects in relation to the works of Hume and Smith, this book connects Hume’s and Smith’s legal thought with their moral philosophy and shows the relevance of their moral philosophy to their legal writings. It completes the analysis of Hume’s and Smith’s moral philosophy by focusing on what they had to say about law, by comparing and contrasting these two thinkers and putting them into context with Scottish Enlightenment thought generally.

Hume and Smith’s different views in relation to the origin of justice, of morality and of other foundational conceptions of the law are compared and contrasted and also considered in relation to other thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment and beyond.

Subjects:
Jurisprudence
Contents:
Preface

I. Introduction: The Importance of Law in Hume's and Smith's Writings and among other Philosophers of the
Scottish Enlightenment
1. The Theme of this Book
a) The intellectual relationship between David Hume and Adam Smith. The relevance of law
b) The considerable importance of law in the moral philosophy of Hume and Smith
2. The Emphasis on Law in the Moral Philosophy of the Scottish Enlightenment
a) Francis Hutcheson
b) Lord Kames (Henry Home)
c)Thomas Reid
d)Adam Ferguson
e)James Beattie
3. Use of Sources and Methodology
4. A Short Introduction to Basic Concepts and Principles of Private Law for the Non-Lawyer

II. Morality and Law
1. Relevant Parts of Hume’s Epistemic Framework for Hume’s Conception of Morality: An Outline of Hume’s Theory of the Mind
a) Impressions, ideas and relations
b) Cause and effect
c) Personal identity: the commonwealth and the company as comparisons
2. Hume’s System of Morality and its Relationship to Law
a) Passions, necessity, and reason
b) Reason and morality. The is-ought problem
c) Morality and law
3. Adam Smith’s Conception of Morality and its Relevance to Law
a) The position of Smith’s moral philosophy between a theory of understanding and a theory of law
b) Smith’s concept of passions, sympathy, and the impartial spectator as the measure for propriety
4. Hume’s and Smith’s Philosophies of Morality in relation to Law within the Scottish Enlightenment

III. Justice and its Origin
1. Justice within Hume’s Overall Conception of Human Nature
2. Hume’s Idea of Justice as an Artificial Virtue, and the Origin of Justice
3. Adam Smith’s Idea of Justice
a) The general rules of morality and their relationship to justice, and the notion of ‘laws’
b) Justice and its enforcement through punishment
c) Smith’s and Hume’s different conceptions of justice
4. The Concept of Justice: A Comparison with other Representatives of the Scottish Enlightenment
a) Francis Hutcheson
b) Lord Kames (Henry Home)
c) Thomas Reid
d) A critical summary

IV. Property
1. Origin and Justification of Property
a) Origin and justification of property according to Hume
b) Origin and justification of property according to Smith. The four-stages theory of human progress
c) A modern definition of property and property right, and Scottish Enlightenment thought as an impulse
2. Acquisition of Property
a) Hume
b) Smith
3. Prescription
4. Transfer of Property
a) Hume
b) Smith
5. Restricted or Subordinate Real Rights: An Example of Smith’s Idea of Historical Jurisprudence
6. Property as a Cornerstone of Justice and as a Basis for Commerce

V. Obligations
1. Promises and Contracts
a) Hume
b) Smith
2. Delict or Tort and Causation
3. Tort (Reparation) and Crime

VI. Family, Government, Nations and Trade
1. Introduction
2. Family and Household
a) Marriage and family
b) Servants and employees, and slaves
3. Government
a) Society, and the origin, principles and forms of government
b) The idea of the social contract or ‘original contract’
c) The relationship between the individual and the state: allegiance and resistance to government
4. Law of Nations
5. Trade and Commerce
a) Contracts
b) Property and property transfer
c) Abolition of the feudal system

Concluding Comments