======================= HES POSTING ================= reply to Professor Moss i think there has been a misunderstanding. Professor Moss elaborates on the role of unintended consequences in Smith. I agree with every word. He then slaps me on the wrist for not giving citations (I have, in earlier posts, but I try not to burden colleagues with excessively long posts - see my paper on Hume in the European Journal of HET 1997 and my forthcoming paper on Hume and Smith in the Scotish Journal for more citations - I will mail the forthcoming file to anyone interested) and invites me to reply, as if he were challenging what I have said. But his line is surely the one I have been arguing - unintended consequences matter in fact, and Smith said so. The problem may be with a paragraph in which I admitted that conscious policy had a role. This was a concession on my part, against the main line of my argument, to placate others who have played down unintended consequences. But surely we have to admit that governments or rulers of states did sometimes adopt policies, designed for example to attract profitable entrepot trade, which were clearly intended to enlarge the market sector. My point was that these were themselves derivative from the example of already successful trading states, that is, that the unintended consequences story comes first in explaining the rise of the market. I didn't intend to attribute this concession to Smith or Hume, though I was perhaps unclear about that. We are on the same side. Tony ---------------------- Tony Brewer ([log in to unmask]) University of Bristol, Department of Economics 8 Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1TN, England Phone (+44/0)117 928 8428 Fax (+44/0)117 928 8577 ============ FOOTER TO HES POSTING ============ For information, send the message "info HES" to [log in to unmask]