
Contents
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1.1 Essays: ‘Of the Rise and Progress of the Arts and Sciences’ 1.1 Essays: ‘Of the Rise and Progress of the Arts and Sciences’
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1.2 Essays: Political Discourses 1.2 Essays: Political Discourses
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2. Hume’s History of England 2. Hume’s History of England
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3.1 The Stuarts: narrative 3.1 The Stuarts: narrative
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3.2 The Stuarts: non-narrative 3.2 The Stuarts: non-narrative
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4.1 The Tudors: narrative 4.1 The Tudors: narrative
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4.2 The Tudors: non-narrative 4.2 The Tudors: non-narrative
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5. The early history of England 5. The early history of England
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6. Revisions to the History of England 6. Revisions to the History of England
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Conclusion Conclusion
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9 The end of economic statecraft: David Hume’s History of England
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Published:August 2018
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Abstract
This chapter is concerned with the relationship between David Hume’s writing on political economy and his History of England (1754–61). Underpinning his analysis in these works, it is argued, was an attempt to give England's commercial and financial interests – interests which were in Hume's estimation of vital importance to government – a proper intellectual foundation. In performing this task, Hume developed a damning critique of the economic statecraft tradition; indeed, it was, in part, the misunderstandings of economic affairs committed by previous generations of historians that he sought to warn his readers against and correct. The chapter opens by looking at how these ideas shaped his essays of the 1740s and 1750s, before moving on to look in detail at the History.
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