If there's a prize for being the first to point out the following, I
hereby claim it:
Smith's actual words are "[the merchant] is in this, as in many other
cases, led by an invisible hand [etc.]" -- no "as if" about it (WN
IV.ii.9: page 456).
In consolation, this common mistake has been committed by no less
figure than Joseph Stiglitz; see:
http://www.newstatesman.com/business/2008/10/economy-world-crisis-financial
Further, as Gavin Kennedy points out in a comment on this page (16
October 2008 at 11:58), Smith uses the metaphor -- in the only place
in which he does use it -- in relation to the allocation of capital
guided by the merchant's pursuit of profit, not in relation to supply
and demand or any other manifestation of market processes.
On a constructive note, there would be an interesting project in
trying to find out whether this misquotation had any currency before
Milton Friedman published his notorious methodological essay.
Julian Wells