The notion of a textbook is a historically contingent category.
Treating textbooks aimed at the college market differently from other books
may make sense nowadays, but in the past, as the examples of Smith, Mill and
Marshall make clear, there was no clear demarcation. In parts of the
humanities this is still the case.
If students do not read their textbooks, why do they buy them, given the high
prices at which they sell? Are students not economizing agents who purchase
only if the utility exceeds the cost?
Roger Backhouse