The Worldly Philosophers
A classic exploration of the history of economic thought, profiling the lives and visions of the great economists—from Adam Smith and Karl Marx to John Maynard Keynes—who shaped the modern world's understanding of wealth and social order.
Lessons
Lesson
This lesson introduces the concept of the "worldly philosopher," exploring how historical economic theories form an invisible intellectual architecture that shapes our modern reality and social norms. By examining the influence of thinkers like Adam Smith and John Maynard Keynes, students learn to identify how abstract philosophical constructs—rather than objective natural laws—define our current economic systems and political possibilities.
The Economic Revolution explores how the pre-capitalist world functioned through social and moral obligations rather than independent economic laws. It examines the transition from survival based on tradition and command to the emergence of the modern market system, where profit-seeking and price signals dictate economic life.
This lesson explores the transition from Mercantilism, an economic philosophy focused on state-controlled gold accumulation and trade restrictions, to Adam Smith’s vision of consumer-centered prosperity. Students will examine how Smith’s shift toward market-driven well-being challenged the era's rigid, zero-sum view of national wealth.
ECON000: The Gloomy Presentiments of Malthus and Ricardo explores how the intellectual partnership between Thomas Malthus and David Ricardo shifted economic thought from Enlightenment optimism to the somber analysis of the dismal science. Students will examine Malthus’s theory of population growth, which highlights the structural conflict between geometric population expansion and arithmetic limits on food production.
This lesson explores the shift from Adam Smith’s optimism to the "dismal science" of Malthus and Ricardo, highlighting how abstract economic models often ignored the social suffering caused by industrialization. It also contrasts the era's brutal laissez-faire practices with Robert Owen’s New Lanark, which demonstrated that industrial success could be achieved by prioritizing human welfare and environmental conditions.
This lesson explores the influential partnership between Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, highlighting how their collaboration led to the 1848 Communist Manifesto and a shift toward scientific socialism. It further examines Marx’s inversion of Hegelian philosophy, replacing the focus on abstract ideas with a materialist view of history driven by economic forces.
This lesson explores the transition of economics from a field of revolutionary political philosophy to a specialized, technical science focused on mathematical equilibrium. It highlights how empirical evidence of rising living standards challenged Marxist predictions of collapse, leading to the professionalization of the discipline and the adoption of mathematical models to measure human utility.
This lesson explores the Gilded Age as an Era of Brass Knuckles, contrasting the neoclassical theory of rational market equilibrium with the reality of predatory corporate warfare and physical sabotage. It introduces Thorstein Veblen’s perspective, which analyzes these economic power struggles through an anthropological lens to reveal how status-driven prowess and institutional behavior shaped the American industrial landscape.
This lesson explores the ideological shift from Karl Marx’s view of capitalism as a doomed system to John Maynard Keynes’s perspective of it as a salvageable machine requiring technical management. Students will learn how Keynes challenged classical economic theories by proposing that government intervention could repair systemic malfunctions and preserve the existing social order.
This lesson explores Joseph Schumpeter’s critique of the "stationary state," arguing that capitalism is defined not by static equilibrium, but by the dynamic process of creative destruction. Students will learn how entrepreneurs drive economic growth through innovation and "new combinations," which serve as the true source of profit in an otherwise circular economy.
This lesson explores the tension between treating economics as a deterministic physical science and recognizing it as a social science defined by human volition. It argues that because individuals possess the capacity for reflexive choice—as seen in the Veblen Effect—economic behavior cannot be reduced to the predictable, mechanistic laws found in physics.
Course Overview
📚 Content Summary
A classic exploration of the history of economic thought, profiling the lives and visions of the great economists—from Adam Smith and Karl Marx to John Maynard Keynes—who shaped the modern world's understanding of wealth and social order.
Discover the revolutionary ideas and eccentric lives of the thinkers who invented the modern economic world.
Author: Robert L. Heilbroner
Acknowledgments: Dedicated to the author's teachers. The author acknowledges Joseph Barnes of Simon & Schuster, Frederick Lewis Allen of Harper's, and Professor Adolph Lowe of the New School for Social Research.
🎯 Learning Objectives
- Define "worldly philosophers" and explain how their ideas evolve from heretical opinions into modern common sense.
- Contrast the three methods of social survival: Tradition (kinship/caste), Command (authority/whip), and the Market (lure of gain).
- Identify the "Economic Revolution" as the emergence of a new vision centered on the philosophy of gain.
- Distinguish between the three primary methods societies use to guard against economic calamity: Tradition, Command, and the Market.
- Analyze the historical "invention" of the profit motive and the emergence of the "Economic Man."
- Explain how the Enclosure Movement and the commercialization of land and labor facilitated the rise of the proletariat and the market system.
- Analyze the shift from Mercantilism to Smith’s labor-centered theory of value and "universal opulence."
- Explain the dual mechanism of self-interest and competition in achieving market self-regulation.
- Evaluate the role of the state within a laissez-faire framework and identify the historical limits of Smith's 18th-century vision.
- Contrast the intellectual approaches of Malthus and Ricardo regarding economic theory and social reality.
Lessons
Overview: This lesson introduces the "worldly philosophers"—the great economists whose ideas have shaped the intellectual architecture of modern life. It explores the fundamental problem of human survival and the three historical mechanisms used to organize society: Tradition, Command, and the Market System. The focus is on the "Economic Revolution," the transition where the lure of personal gain replaced the whip of authority or the pull of custom.
Learning Outcomes:
- Define "worldly philosophers" and explain how their ideas evolve from heretical opinions into modern common sense.
- Contrast the three methods of social survival: Tradition (kinship/caste), Command (authority/whip), and the Market (lure of gain).
- Identify the "Economic Revolution" as the emergence of a new vision centered on the philosophy of gain.
Overview: This lesson examines the seismic shift from pre-capitalist societies to the modern market system. It explores how humanity transitioned from survival based on tradition and command to a world driven by the "profit motive," the abstraction of land, labor, and capital, and the social upheaval of the Enclosure Movement.
Learning Outcomes:
- Distinguish between the three primary methods societies use to guard against economic calamity: Tradition, Command, and the Market.
- Analyze the historical "invention" of the profit motive and the emergence of the "Economic Man."
- Explain how the Enclosure Movement and the commercialization of land and labor facilitated the rise of the proletariat and the market system.
Overview: This lesson explores the transition from the Mercantilist "Pre-Adamite" vision to Adam Smith’s revolutionary "System of Perfect Liberty." It examines the internal mechanics of a market economy—specifically how self-interest and competition act as the "invisible hand" to regulate society—and outlines Smith’s laws of accumulation and population that drive economic evolution. Finally, it addresses the limits of Smith’s preindustrial perspective and his enduring legacy as the father of modern economics.
Learning Outcomes:
- Analyze the shift from Mercantilism to Smith’s labor-centered theory of value and "universal opulence."
- Explain the dual mechanism of self-interest and competition in achieving market self-regulation.
- Evaluate the role of the state within a laissez-faire framework and identify the historical limits of Smith's 18th-century vision.
Overview: This lesson explores the foundational "dismal" theories of Thomas Robert Malthus and David Ricardo, focusing on the tension between population growth and the means of subsistence. It analyzes the shifting economic vision from general prosperity to class-based conflict, specifically examining how rent, grain laws, and market gluts defined the early 19th-century economic landscape.
Learning Outcomes:
- Contrast the intellectual approaches of Malthus and Ricardo regarding economic theory and social reality.
- Explain the Malthusian Principle of population growth versus arithmetic food production.
- Analyze the Ricardian system of distribution among workers, capitalists, and landlords, including the mechanism of differential rent.
Overview: This lesson explores the intellectual and social reaction to the harsh industrial conditions of the early 19th century through the lens of the "Utopian Socialists." It traces the shift from the violent resistance of the Luddites to the visionary social experiments of Robert Owen, Saint-Simon, and Charles Fourier. Finally, it examines how John Stuart Mill synthesized these visionary ideals with economic logic by distinguishing between the immutable laws of production and the socially determined laws of distribution.
Learning Outcomes:
- Identify the social and economic motivations behind the Utopian Socialist movement and the early labor movements (Luddism, Trade Unionism).
- Compare and contrast the communal models proposed by Robert Owen (Villages of Cooperation), Saint-Simon (Industrial Religion), and Charles Fourier (Phalanstère).
- Explain John Stuart Mill’s pivotal distinction between the "Laws of Production" and the "Laws of Distribution."
Overview: This lesson explores the comprehensive and "inexorable" socio-economic system developed by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. It traces the transition from Hegelian philosophy to historical materialism, examining how the economic base dictates the social superstructure and drives class struggle. Students will analyze the internal mechanics of capitalism through Das Kapital, focusing on the theory of surplus value, the "laws of motion" that lead to capitalist breakdown, and the eventual rise of the proletariat.
Learning Outcomes:
- Analyze the shift from Hegelian idealism to Marxian dialectical materialism as the foundation for the materialist conception of history.
- Explain the extraction of surplus value within a "perfect" capitalist system and how it creates the paradox of profit.
- Evaluate the "laws of motion" in the Marxian model, including the role of the Industrial Reserve Army and the falling rate of profit.
Overview: This lesson explores the transformation of economic thought during the Victorian era, marking a shift from the broad, sociopolitical "Political Economy" to the precise, mathematical "Economics." It examines the rise of equilibrium theory and the "pleasure machine" model of humanity, while simultaneously investigating the "Economic Underworld"—a group of heterodox thinkers who challenged the status quo by addressing issues of protectionism, land rent, and the imperialist consequences of underconsumption.
Learning Outcomes:
- Analyze the transition from classical political economy to mathematical economics and the concept of "perfect competition."
- Evaluate the satirical and moral critiques of economic policy provided by "underworld" thinkers like Frederic Bastiat and Henry George.
- Explain the economic theories of imperialism, specifically the roles of underconsumption, the internationalization of capital, and the multinational corporation.
Overview: This lesson explores the provocative economic and social theories of Thorstein Veblen, who viewed the "Age of Industrial Supremacy" through the lens of an anthropological outsider. We will examine Veblen's critique of the "Robber Barons," his deconstruction of the leisure class's predatory habits, and the fundamental conflict between the productive "machine process" and the profit-driven "business system." The content spans the financial chicanery of the Gilded Age to Veblen’s vision of a technological society managed by engineers rather than saboteur businessmen.
Learning Outcomes:
- Analyze the anthropological origins of the "leisure class" and its role in maintaining social stability through competitive emulation.
- Distinguish between "Industry" (the machine process) and "Business" (the pursuit of pecuniary gain) within Veblen’s framework.
- Evaluate the historical impact of "Robber Barons" and financial schemes on the American economic landscape.
Overview: This lesson explores the intellectual revolution of John Maynard Keynes, the "architect of Capitalism Viable" who challenged the traditional view that market economies naturally self-correct. It traces his journey from a critic of the Versailles Treaty to the developer of the General Theory, which proposed that government intervention is necessary to bridge the gap between savings and investment to prevent permanent economic depression.
Learning Outcomes:
- Contrast the economic philosophies of Karl Marx and John Maynard Keynes regarding the future of capitalism.
- Analyze Keynes’s critique of the Versailles Treaty and its economic implications for Europe.
- Explain the failure of the "Seesaw Theory" and the concept of "Equilibrium of Depression."
Overview: This lesson explores the economic and sociological theories of Joseph Schumpeter, focusing on his vision of capitalism as a dynamic, ever-changing system. Unlike his contemporary Keynes, who focused on stability, Schumpeter emphasized "Creative Destruction," the role of the innovative entrepreneur, and the paradoxical idea that capitalism's very success would eventually lead to its social demise.
Learning Outcomes:
- Contrast the economic visions of Joseph Schumpeter and John Maynard Keynes regarding the nature of capitalist growth.
- Explain the "Circular Flow" and why Schumpeter believed innovation is the only true source of profit.
- Analyze the "Gale of Creative Destruction" and Schumpeter’s prognosis for the future of capitalist society.
Overview: This lesson explores the fundamental identity of economics, questioning whether it functions as a rigid physical science or a nuanced social science shaped by human volition. It further examines the ultimate "end" or purpose of economics as a tool for understanding the capitalist setting and provides a comprehensive bibliographic roadmap for further exploration of economic thought.
Learning Outcomes:
- Distinguish between economics as an exact physical science and as a social science based on the concept of human volition.
- Define the purpose of economics in the context of the drive for capital and market constraints.
- Evaluate key bibliographic resources and historical texts that define the evolution of economic philosophy.