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Como Adam Smith Pode Mudar Sua Vida

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Adam Smith se tornou o pai da economia moderna depois de escrever A riqueza das nacoes . Mas pouca gente sabe que o filosofo escoces do seculo XVIII tambem tinha muito a dizer sobre comportamento e etica.

Ele desenvolveu suas ideias sobre o modo como nos relacionamos, a maneira como tratamos as pessoas e as decisoes que tomamos no livro Teoria dos sentimentos morais .

O pesquisador e economista Russ Roberts examinou essa obra-prima esquecida e descobriu um tesouro de sabedoria pratica e atemporal. Em COMO ADAM SMITH PODE MUDAR SUA VIDA , ele mostra que as reflexoes do pensador sobre a natureza humana sao tao relevantes hoje quanto eram ha 300 anos.

Como conhecer a si mesmo? Como ser feliz? Como nao se enganar? Como ser amado e amavel? Como tornar o mundo um lugar melhor? Como viver no mundo moderno?

As respostas inesperadas de Adam Smith, analisadas no contexto dos acontecimentos, da literatura, da historia e da cultura pop atuais, sao profundas, surpreendentes e ate divertidas. Russ Roberts reinterpreta os pensamentos do filosofo e lanca uma nova luz sobre questoes simples e complexas do nosso dia a dia.

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First published October 1, 2014

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Russ Roberts

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Profile Image for Maziyar Yf.
813 reviews630 followers
July 4, 2025
کتاب آدام اسمیت چگونه می تواند زندگی شما را تغییر دهد ، نوشته کوتاهی ایست در وصف و ستایش آدام اسمیت ، پدر علم اقتصاد ،
فیلسوف اخلاق گرای مشهور اسکاتلندی و از نظریه پردازان اساسی آنچه که امروزه به نام سرمایه داری مدرن می شناسیم .
تلقی عمومی از آدام اسمیت بیشتر بر پایه کتاب بسیار معروف او ثروت ملل است که غالبا از آن رقابت بی رحمانه و موضوعیت نداشتن اخلاق ، تقسیم کار خشن ، محاسبه همه چیز بر مبنای سود و زیان و اولویت دادن یک اصل بر تمامی تصمیمات یعنی حداکثرسازی منفعت و ارجح دانستن سود شخصی برداشت شده و می شود .
در مقدمه کوتاهی که دکتر رِنانی نوشته این برداشت عمومی را ظلم و جفای بسیار به آدام اسمیت دانسته از این رو که تقریبا تمامی بی عدالتی ها ، ناکار آمدی های سرمایه داری را عموما به پای کتاب ثروت ملل او گذاشته و سایر آرا و عقاید و کتاب های اسمیت را به گونه ای نادیده انگاشته اند ، درحقیقت آدام اسمیت شناخته شده بیشتر اقتصاد دان ثروت ملل و یا کتاب دست نامرئی ایست تا فیلسوف اخلاق گرای شاهکار کمتر شناخته شده او : عواطف اخلاقی . اسمیت در کتاب ثروت ملل به چگونه ثروتمند شدن انسان و جامعه پرداخته و در عواطف اخلاقی چگونه خوشبخت شدن انسان و یا جامعه را نشان داده ، اما بشر برداشت خودخواهانه ای از ثروت ملل داشته و عواطف انسانی و پیام والای آنرا کاملا نادیده گرفته است .

آنچه نویسنده آقای راسل دی رابرتس از آدام اسمیت اخلاق گرا نشان داده بسیار شگفت انگیز است ، اسمیت نابغه ای بی بدیل بوده که 250 سال پیش رنج و دشواری که سرمایه داری که خود پدر آن بوده را دیده و نسخه ای شگفت انگیز برای درمان یا رهایی انسان از چنگال این بیماری بدخیم نوشته است .
دیدگاه بسیار خلاصه آدام اسمیت در مورد خوشبختی و انسان خوشبخت ریشه در نیاز انسان به دوست داشته شدن و مهمتر از آن دوست داشتنی بودن دارد ، نه به خاطر رنگ ، مذهب ، چهره و یا ثروت بلکه به دلیل داشتن ارزش و فضیلت هایی که خود سزاوار دوست داشتن است ، البته فیلسوف اخلاق گرا به این نکته هم واقف بوده که این ارزش ها باید در باطن انسان وجود داشته و از راه تملق و یا چاپلوسی دیگران به دست نیامده باشد .مفهوم بسیار مهم از نگاه جناب آقای اسمیت همدلی و ارجح دانستن آن به همدردی ایست ، اسمیت همدردی را به زبان آوردن رنج انسان مصیبت دیده و دلداری دادن او دانسته در حالیکه همدلی یعنی همانند او رنج را درک کردن ، در حقیقت همدلی ایست که انسان را از گرگ جدا می کند و تاکیدی بر این اصل است که بیشتر انسان ها بین همدلی و یا دریدن و وحشیگری ، همدلی را انتخاب می کنند .از طرفی دیگر آدام اسمیت خواننده را به شریف بودن تشویق کرده ، شرافت از نگاه تیزبین او مفهومی سه وجهی دارد ، دور اندیشی ، انصاف و بزرگواری سه وجه آن هستند . کلام اسمیت کلیشه ای و بی روح نیست ، او در ادامه ترسیم مسیر زندگی خواننده را به جستجوی خرد و شرافت توصیه کرده ، او اعتقاد راسخ داشته که باید خود را از نگاه و نظر دیگران یا آنچه ناظر بی طرف می خواند دید .
در مقدمه درخشان دکتر رِنانی ، بارها تاکید شده که کتاب عواطف اخلاقی سالها قبل از کتاب بسیار معروفتر اسمیت یعنی ثروت ملل نوشته شده و تا آخر عمر نویسنده بارها مورد ویرایش قرار گرفته ، در حقیقت اسمیت با تاکید بر صفات والای انسانی ، یعنی عقلانیت و همدلی ، انسان را تشویق به رقابت کرده ، رقابت مطلوب او هم رقابتی است در چارچوب صفات انسانی ، یعنی تلاش برای کسب سود و منفعت بیشتر در سایه موجود بودن فرصت برای تمامی شرکت کنندگان ، نه مسابقه قدرتمندان در جهت جپاول و دریدن نیازمندان .
شوربختانه کتاب عواطف انسانی به فارسی ترجمه نشده و شاید از این رو باشد که جای خالی اخلاق یا به قول اسمیت شرافت در تمامی رویه های زندگی روزانه مان بسیار آشکار و محسوس شده است ، از این جهت کتاب کمتر خوانده شده آدام اسمیت چگونه می تواند زندگی شما را تغییر دهد ( که حتی در سایت گودریدز هم عنوان فارسی آن موجود نبود و من آنرا اضافه کردم ) از انتشارات فرقلم و با ترجمه نسبتا خوب مهدی گنجیان و البته مقدمه درخشان دکتر محسن رِنانی اهمیتی دو چندان پیدا کرده و می تواند کمکی مفید برای اصلاح برداشت سطحی نسبت به آدام اسمیت و باز کردن افق های ذهنی تازه ای برای خواننده باشد .
Profile Image for Amy.
3,050 reviews620 followers
August 24, 2018
2.5 Stars
I have mixed feelings about this one. On the one hand, I appreciate the author's passion for Adam Smith and desire to convey his theories and work to modern readers.
On the other hand, one of the first things you learn in academic writing is not to bore your reader with block quotes. And this book contains many block quotes.
Russ Roberts is an Adam Smith fangirl who wishes to share his passion for the author and desires to turn Adam Smith's The Theory of Moral Sentiments into a modern day self-help book. I think what frustrated me most about this book is that it seemed to take ideas and theories that ought to have been quite interesting and left them...shallow. I was frustrated by the repetitive nature of the work and the basic, pop-psychology lingo used to 'flesh' out the ideas.
Further, I found I did not agree (or I found a different foundation for agreeing) with many of the points of the book. (Presumably, Smith's viewpoints.)
I will read the original work eventually because if nothing else, this book piqued my interest. But at the same time, it also lowered my expectations.
Profile Image for Ken Montville.
123 reviews21 followers
December 5, 2014
This book really goes a long way in taking a work written in the mid-1700s and making it relevant for the 21st Century.

Adam Smith, of course, is famous as the father of modern economics through his book The Wealth of Nations: An Inquiry into the Nature & Causes of the Wealth of Nations. This book is based on an earlier work The Theory of Moral Sentiments in which he philosophises about human nature and human interaction.

It is amazing how similar we are now as to how we were then. How similar our desires to integrate harmoniously into a larger society and be loved and respected.

The author, Russ Robertsis both lucid and entertaining as he dissects this seminal work.

As far as I'm concerned it's a "must read". It's easy to understand and follow. There is virtually next to zero in terms of economic or academic jargon or posturing. The book is instructive without being didactic.

Worth the time.
Profile Image for Andy.
2,075 reviews606 followers
December 31, 2017
I think the author did a really nice job taking a 1700s tome I was never going to read and turning it into a little book that made some sense. There was nothing Earth-shattering in it: the main point seemed to be that happiness comes from trying to be a good person. The reason this is important though is the source—Adam Smith—who is generally used as the mouthpiece for dog-eat-dog laissez-faire materialistic capitalism.
Profile Image for Imran Kazi.
36 reviews6 followers
April 13, 2017
The author probably thought that his readers have an average age of twelve, I could not think of any other reason for so many explanations and elaborations on so many self-explanatory things. Or else, he wanted to give his book a respectable size.
Profile Image for Fabio Ismerim Ismerim.
124 reviews6 followers
November 30, 2016
Sem palavras.

A lista dos top 10 livros de 2016 ganha mais um forte candidato.

Chega a ser quase inacreditável que um filósofo considerado pai da economia com seu estrondoso livro A Riqueza das Nações, tenha escrito um livro tão diferente mas de igual importância como Teoria dos sentimentos morais.

Neste livro o autor traz os ensinamentos que Adam Smith nos deixou ao escrever, no século 18, a Teoria dos sentimentos morais, porém, de uma forma mais acessível e voltado para o mundo moderno. É realmente muito estranho e ao mesmo tempo surpreendente, ver Smith pregar que dinheiro não traz felicidade e que as pessoas devem conviver harmoniosamente e com máximo de respeito, empatia, solidariedade, sem egoísmo, e por aí vai.

Ensinamentos fortes que será capaz de mudar a forma como você enxerga o mundo ao seu redor e um ótimo caminho para o autoconhecimento.

Recomendo DEMAIS este livro. E, por favor, não se apegue a dualidades de esquerda, direita, capitalismo, socialismo, etc. Este livro não é sobre conceitos econômicos, sociais, desigualdades ou se capitalismo é injusto ou não. Este livro fala sobre como você pode ser uma pessoa melhor. Como você pode ajudar o mundo e as pessoas ao seu redor a ser mais felizes e a prosperar.

Curioso que Adam Smith escreveu Teoria dos sentimentos morais antes de A Riqueza das Nações, no entanto, o enorme sucesso do segundo ofuscou o primeiro, infelizmente.

"Um livro excelente. Faz você se sentir melhor com a vida, com a humanidade e com você mesmo" - Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Profile Image for nananatte.
429 reviews138 followers
August 15, 2017
'พลิกชีวิต คิดอย่างอาดัม สมิธ' เขียนโดย Russ Roberts แปลโดย สุภาภรณ์ กาญจน์วีระโยธิน สนพ. open world

อ่านสนุก เพลินๆ ดีค่ะ
เปลี่ยนมุมมองที่มีต่ออาดัม สมิธ จากลุงแก่ๆ ท่าทางน่าเบื่อสอนวิชาเศรษฐศาสตร์ชวนมึนงง มาเป็นหนุ่มใหญ่คูลๆ ฮิปๆ เข้าใจโลก เข้าใจจิตใจ จิตวิญญาณ ความสัมพันธ์ภายใน สนุกดีค่ะ

เล่มนี้เป็นการตีความและขยายความงานเขียนเรื่อง The Theory of Moral Sentiments ของอดัม สมิธ ผลงานเขียนก่อน The Wealth of Nation ค่ะ (เราพึ่งรู้ว่าอดัม สมิธเป็นนักปรัชญา)

คิดว่าจัดเป็นหนังสือแนว spiritual นะคะ แต่วิธีเล่าเรื่องค่อนมาทางเศรษฐศาสตร์พฤติกรรม ดังนั้น ภาษาก็ต้องใช้ความพยายามในการอ่านนิดนึง แต่ก็อ่านเรื่อยๆ ได้สนุกดีค่ะ อ่านแล้วรู้สึกอาดัม สมิธเข้าถึงได้ง่ายขึ้น มีชีวิตเป็นตัวเป็นตน อ่านแล้วเหมือนได้มีบทสนทนาดีๆ กับคุณลุงเข้าใจโลกที่อาบน้ำร้อนมาก่อนเป็น 200 กว่าปีค่ะ (^__^)

เป็นหนังสือที่อธิบาย 'วิธีการเป็นคนน่ารัก' ได้ละเอียด เป็นเหตุเป็นผล และน่าประทับใจมากค่ะ
Profile Image for รพีพัฒน์ อิงคสิทธิ์.
Author 10 books108 followers
January 12, 2019
เป็นหนังสือที่หยิบเอา theory of moral sentiments มาเล่าแบบเป็นฉากๆ แถมพยายามย่อยให้ยังกับเป็นหนังสือพัฒนาตนเอง ส่วนตัวมองว่าก็พอใช้ได้ แต่บางครั้งอาจใส่ 'เครื่องปรุง' คือมุมมองของผู้เขียนหรือหยิบโยงประสบการณ์เข้ามามากไปสักหน่อย ทำให้เอนเอียงไปตามการตีความของผู้เขียนเองมากกว่าสมิธ
Profile Image for Rick Wilson.
957 reviews408 followers
March 15, 2022
Interesting concept with what seemed like middling execution. Everyone knows Adam Smith for being commonly misquoted about invisible hands and whatever nonsense the Randians are spewing nowadays. Something about not regulating bitcoin I think. I was surprised that Russ doesn't want to discuss Smith's best known "Wealth of Nations," no, Russ wants to talk about "The Theory of Moral Sentiments." In TTOMS, Smith talks about how to live a good life, which mostly seems to revolve around this quote:

“Man naturally desires, not only to be loved, but to be lovely; or to be that thing which is the natural and proper object of love.”

It's a good quote. A great quote even. Smith has some good, traditional old-privileged-white-man wisdom to share about being "lovely" which roughly equates to acting in good conscience and being a moral and helpful person.

And as such, this book started really strong, but unfortunately it didn't build on that concept much and ended up stalling out about halfway through. I was impressed with the prescience that it seems Smith had. Russ set himself up for a banger of a book. But sadly, it seemed like the author recycled the same few core ideas around "being lovely" with a smattering of slightly different examples for the second half of the book. It's like going on a road trip, leaving town with no traffic, finding cheap gas to fill up the car with, clean windshield and empty road in front of you, only to have your radiator blow 20 miles outside of town. Lots of build up for a big disappointment.
650 reviews
May 19, 2015
A quick, interesting read about Adam Smith's lesser-known work The Theory of Moral Sentiments. Roberts shows how Smith's advice and observations - made a few centuries ago - ring just as true today. Chapters with advice on how to make the world a better place and how to be "lovely" in Smith's sense of the word are upbeat and easy to digest.
Profile Image for Joel.
5 reviews
July 18, 2015
Finally, an economist finishes and thoughtfully considers the other (and arguably more important) half of Adam Smith's seminal treatise on human behavior. Russ Roberts writes a wonderful narrative that weaves together the main themes of Smith's book, "The Theory of Moral Sentimants." Personally, I've struggled to get through Smith's complex rant on happiness and virtues. It's both repetitious non-linear. But Robert's analysis has convinced me that it may actually be worth the effort to slog through...eventually.

Smith became known for his observations about human self-interest and specialization, but his work on morality was largely forgotten. Interestingly, his book the "The Theory of Moral Sentiments" was written before and continually revised after his work on "The Wealth of Nations." While the latter laid a foundation for the modern study of economics, the former explored human interaction outside of commercial pursuits, and was more influential during his life.

As a student of Economics, I find this other perspective a useful addition to my education. Economics is an incredibly useful way of studying and measuring human interactions within complex systems. So useful, in fact, that it has begun to infiltrate and change the way other disciplines study human behavior. But Economics can also be cold and mechanistic, teaching its students to consider the world through the narrow prism of trade-offs and benefit-cost analyses.

Modern Economics has even given us the tools to deliberately create new ways of managing resources in areas where creating systems of exchange were once thought too difficult (e.g. the environment). Yet in the "Theory of Moral Sentiments" Smith points out us that commercial activity is bound by, and not a replacement for, a society's ethics. He reminds us that the sum of human interactions cannot be considered only through the calculation of benefits and costs. This is not only an important reminder for economists, but for anyone working in the fields of business and public policy.
Profile Image for Erik Rostad.
422 reviews171 followers
May 28, 2021
Delightful book. I'm one who thinks that the original book should be read before reading books about the original, but this one was a quick read that helped set a foundation should I read the original later on. The book in question is The Theory of Moral Sentiments by Adam Smith. It is his lesser-known book and was written before his more popular Wealth of Nations. Russ Roberts, author of this book, expounds on Adam Smith's contention that "Man naturally desires, not only to be loved, but to be lovely." This book cleared up some economic thought for me and was just a pleasant book to read. I listen to the author's weekly podcast EconTalk and had wanted to read this book for a while. I'm glad I did.

--
2nd reading (2021) - I enjoyed it better this time around. I also just finished reading Russ Roberts three novels. It's been great seeing main themes expand across his books.
Profile Image for Ana Luz.
25 reviews
December 8, 2025
I wasn’t expecting anything for the title , it was a huge surprise, I enjoyed every chapter, history and example, sharing some love expecting some love, start with your inner circle. 💖
Profile Image for Albert W Tu.
33 reviews1 follower
November 5, 2014
Delightful and useful

This book is easily comparable to "How Proust Can Change Your Life" and Russ Roberts mentions Alain de Botton's book as an inspiration in the acknowledgements at the end. Adam Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments is much lesser known than Wealth of Nations but no less important. Readers will be thankful that Roberts has digested Adam Smith's difficult to read text - I love an obtusely written book and my copy of TMS has sat on the shelf unconquered for close to two decades - and produced a more palatable summary of Smith's major arguments. I originally questioned Roberts choice to untether himself from TMS logical sequence but finished the book untroubled, He is thankfully generous with quoting long selectionsso you get a feel for the original language.
The timelessness of Smith's guidance is what makes this book useful. The infatuation with a pocket watch is eerily similar to that of the latest smartphone. Honestly evaluating our behavior is so difficult that, "Rather than see ourselves as we truly are, we see ourselves as we would
like to be. Self deception can be more comforting tan self knowledge. We like to fool ourselves." (Roberts)
Most entertaining is Smith's guidance on the illusory benefits of celebrity and money. Smith: "The great source of both the misery and disorders of human life, seems to arise from over-rating the difference between one permanent situation and another.

Most rewarding is the idea that being good is the way to feel good. Roberts: "When we earn the admiration of others honestly by being respectable, honorable, blameless, generous, and kind, the end result is true happiness....Loveliness is an end in and of itself".

Smith's demand that we strictly adhere to the rules of justice shows how he understands human nature all too well. We are very clever at finding "special circumstances" where rule breaking is permissible, even necessary. Roberts: "Hard-and-fast rules are easier to keep than rules that are slightly relaxed. You'd think abstinence would be much harder to keep than moderation. Yet it is much easier to give up potato chips than to eat just one. Or a few."

The chapter "How to Make the World a Better Place" describes how each person can and must contribute by doing good each an every day. These small acts accrete imperceptibly but result in massive effects. The English language isn't dictated by a committee of scholars but composed of the daily usage of millions. Similarly, there are few obvious benefits to voting - the impact of an individual vote is mathematically meaningless - but millions of individual votes each election renew our democratic system.

Doing good will not only make you happy but make the world a better place? Not a bad lesson from a entertaining and well written book.
Profile Image for Tristan.
100 reviews8 followers
June 11, 2018
I wanted to know what Adam Smith said in The Theory of Moral Sentiments, but didn't actually want to read it. Russ Robert's charming little book satisfied that urge. The take-away point is just what you'd expect from a self-help book (although you might not have expected it from the writer of The Wealth of Nations): find happiness locally, and don't pursue money and fame as ends in themselves.

Here are some favourite quotes:

"If you want to get better at what you do, if you want to get better at this thing called life, you have to pay attention."

"We may be overly sensitive to our physical deformities or even the slightest physical imperfections when we look in the mirror. Our eyes are drawn to those shortcomings the way a sore tooth attracts the tongue. But our moral failings? My failings as a husband, as a father, or a son or a friend? There is apparently no mirror for those. Most of the time, I'd rather not look."

"...if you want to be rich and famous, powerful and successful, you have to give up leisure and ease and careless security forever."

"Smith understands something deep about human nature... Hard-and-fast rules are easier to keep than rules that are slightly relaxed. The opposite should be true. You'd think abstinence would be much harder to keep than moderation. Yet it is much easier to give up potato chips than to eat just one."

"Smith's vision of what sustains civilization is the stream of approval and disapproval we all provide as we respond to the conduct of those around us."

"The 'buy local' movement has been successful with a very limited number of products—food and some handcrafted items. The ability to broaden the scope of the movement is very limited. We tried buying local once; it was called the Middle Ages... There just isn't enough specialization possible with a limited set of trading partners. Self-sufficiency is the road to poverty."

"As F.A. Hayek pointed out in The Fatal Conceit, a modern person has to inhabit two worlds at the same time—a world that is intimate and a world that is distant, a world that is held together by love and a world that is held together by prices and monetary incentives."

"Looking for love? Look locally. We have precious little of it in our lives anyway. Let's reserve it for those we see every day. Love locally, trade globally."
Profile Image for Chris Boutté.
Author 8 books277 followers
December 12, 2021
I developed interest in Adam Smith after reading the books by Paul Bloom, and he recommended this book. I picked it up to learn more about smith, and it was absolutely amazing. I highly recommend checking it out

2nd read:
During this difficult time I’ve been going through, I’ve been thinking about this book a lot because it really helped me the first time I read it. Russ Roberts breaks down Adam Smith’s less famous first book about living a good life. I started re-reading it yesterday and finished it within about a day. This book describes Adam Smith’s philosophy of living a good life in a way that anyone can understand, and I appreciate Russ Roberts taking the time to write it. The book helps put into perspective what we value and how we should treat other people. It was also really interesting how Roberts showed how Smith’s famous “invisible hand” is also a guide for how we can live a moral life. It bums me out to know that Smith is most famous for his economics and it’s often poorly referenced as an argument for this world of winner-take-all capitalism because when you understand Smith’s views on morality, you see how he’d probably have some criticisms of modern-day American capitalism and how we treat one another.
Profile Image for Rick Sam.
439 reviews157 followers
April 4, 2021
This is all you need to know.

"To be content, you need to be loved and to be lovely."

There are two ways to be loved. You can be rich and famous. Or you can be wise and virtuous.

Choose the second way, Smith counsels, the way of wisdom and virtue.

Why need Adam Smith when religious traditions give the same response?

I know -- Secular people would pay attention to what Russ Roberts has to say about Adam Smith.

However, if response came from any of the religious tradition, it is not palatable.

Don't read this book, if you have read enough in religious tradition, philosophy.

Basically, literature from Religious Tradition would offer the same.

Russ basically repackages it into Secular, shiny book.

If you want to Analyze Moral Philosophy, dive into Adam Smith's other works.

If you have never read a book in your life, go ahead.

Rich & Famous, sounds like lot of trouble and complexity in life.

Religious Tradition: Hinduism, Islamic, Buddhism, Jain, Christian tradition offer solid content.

Good luck handling it.

Overall, I'd say, Not Worth your Time, read religious literature for this

Deus Vult,
Gottfried
410 reviews
November 22, 2014
easy to read..."If you want to make the world a better place, work on being trustworthy, and honor those who are trustworthy. Be a good friend and surround yourself with worthy friends. Don't gossip. Resist the joke that might hurt someone/s feelings even when it's clever. And try not to laugh when your friend tells you that clever joke at someone's expense. Being good is not just good for you and those around you, but because it helps others be good as well. Set a good example, and by your loveliness you will not only be loved but you may influence the world."
Suggestions for further reading: "Read more Adam Smith and Jane Austen and P.G. Wodehouse and less of the Daily Kos and the Drudge Report."
Profile Image for Kimberly.
343 reviews
April 10, 2017
This book is phenomenal! It reviews and distills Adam Smith's first book, "The Theory of Moral Sentiments." I never knew he had written such a book. This first book of Smith's iterates how wealth and fame do not assure happiness, but rather, being prudent and lovely will lead to happiness. Toward the end of the book, I started listing the people to whom I would give this book. I borrowed this book from the library, but I like it so much I am going to purchase it so I can read it again in the future - it is that good.
Profile Image for Gavin.
566 reviews43 followers
May 21, 2019
Really interesting idea of comparing Adam Smith's book with today. I know this type has become a bit of a cottage industry, but this is quite well done. Dealing with celebrity, money, and power amongst other things I found it quite relevant to life.

A long start to finish because I misplace my copy. Glad to finish though.
Profile Image for Nick Breen.
2 reviews3 followers
May 7, 2015
Summary: Adam Smith wrote the book which formed modern capitalism, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, generally referred to by its shortened title The Wealth of Nations. He wrote a second book that isn’t nearly as popular: The Theory of moral sentiments. This book disects the theory or moral sentiments and it gives modern day examples. At a high level, Adam Smith’s is summed up as love locally, trade globally.

Should you read the book: No, my highlights or any other summary should be sufficient.

Memorable Quotes:
Chapter 1 How Adam smith can change your life
Economics helps you understand that money isn’t the only thing that matters in life. Economics teaches you that making a choice means giving up something. And economics can help you apperciate complexity and how seemingly unrelated actions and people can become entangled.

Chapter2 How to know yourself
We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages.

I Always encourage the students to address their employer’s self-love and not just their humanity- to come up with some reason XYZ will benefit from hiring them. How would your skills serve the goals of XYZ?

SO if the milk of human kindness is in such short supply, why aren’t we more outrageously selfish, more sordid? Smith’s answer is that our behaviour is driven by an imaginary interaction with what he calls the impartial spectator - a figure we imagine whom we converse with in some virtual sense, an impartial, objective figure who sees the morality of our actions clearly. It is this figure we answer to when we consider what is moral or right.

The impartial spectator reminds us that we are not the centre of the universe.

Stepping outside yourself is an opportunity for what is sometimes called mindfulness-the art of paying attention instead of drifting through life oblivious to your flaws and habits.

If you want to get better at what you do, if you want to get better at this thing called life, you have to pay attention. When you pay attention, you can remember what really matters, what is real and enduring, versus what is false and fleeting.

Chapter 3 How to be Happy
Man naturally desires, not only to be loved, but to be lovely.

When Smith says that we want to be lovely, he means worth of being loved... He’s saying that we want to be seen as having integrity, honesty, good principles.

Chapter 4 How not to fool yourself
Life is punctuated by choices like these, in which you have to choose between what is easy and convenient for you (finish your tour and enjoy the acclaim) and a chance to help those around you (Go home and comfort your sister).

I call these the “Smaller decisions”, but they are really not so small. Day by day, the add up to a life.

What before interested is now become almost as indifferent to us as it always was to him, and we can now examine our own conduct with his candour and impartiality.

We often purposely turn away our view from those circumstances which might render that judgement unfavourable.

Equally bold who does not hesitate to pull off the mysterious veil of self-delusion, which covers from his view the deformities of his own conduct.

While we may think our house is actually more beautiful than it is or our skills are more valuable than they really are, when we try to sell our house or look for a job, we gain a richer appreciation of how things truly are.

If we saw ourselves in the light in which others see us, or in which the would see us if the knew all, a reformation would generally be unavoidable. We could not otherwise endure the sight.

Baal Shem Tov the founder of the Hasidic movement said … we notice the flaws in those around us to remind us of our own flaws and to spur us to self-improvement.

We learn what is appropriate, and what is not, from the actions of others.


Reason people use selfless-sounding language .. we say these things not only to convince others but also to convince ourselves.


Our behaviour sometimes falls short of our ideals because we don’t realize we’re not living up to our ideals.

Smith reminds us that it’s hard to objective when you have a horse in the race- your own self-intrest.

We like to think we’re lovely, so we overemphasize and embrace memories that confirm our self-image while forgetting or misremembering anything that casts us in less attractive light.

The universe is full of dots. Connect the right ones and you can draw anything. The important question is not whether the dots you picked are really there, but why you chose to ignore all the others.

They’re come to ignore the possibilityy that there are other solutions to your problem that might actually be more effective or cheaper.

Using the wrong map unknowingly is worse than no map at all-it leads you to overconfidence that can be more harmful than confronting the reality that you’re lost.


Chatper 5 How to be loved
What can be added to the happiness of the man who is in health, who is out of debt, and has a clear conscience?

Every year his salary grows. Every few years he moves into a bigger house and gets a new car. IS he happier? Evidently Not. Just one more year. Then he’ll have enough, he says.

Once we conquer Rome, we’ll be able to subdue all of Itally…. What shall we do then? Asks Cineas. Pyrrhus answers smiling:
‘ We will live at our ease, my dear friend, and drink all day, and divert ourselves with pleasant conversation'
Then Cineas brings down the hammer on the king:
“And what hinders your majesty from doing so now?'
We have all the tools of contentment at hand already.

How many people ruin themselves by laying out money on trinkets of frivolous utility?

We imagine we’d be happier if only we were richer or more famous or had a better job. Greed, ambition, and vanity are how Smith characterizes the vices that push us toward dissatisfaction with what we already have.

Some of those situations may, no doubt, deserve to be preferred to others: but none of them can deserve to be purseued with that passionate ardour which drives us to violate the rules either of prudence or of justice.

The qualiities most useful to ourselves are, first of all, superior reason nd understanding, by which we are capable of discerning the remote consequences of all our actions, and of foreseeing the advantages or detriment which is likey to result from them: and secondly, self command, by which we are enabled to abstain from present pleasure or to endure present pain, in order to obtain a greater pleasure or to avoid a greater pain in some future time. In the union of those two qualities consists the virtue of prudence, of all the virtues that which is most useful to the individual.

We frequently see the respectful attentions of the world more strongly directed towards the rich and the great, than towards the wise and the virtuous.

We idolize those who are idolized. We love those who are loved. Part of it is an awe for excellence.

Seek wisdom and virtue. Behave as if an impartial spectator is watching you. Use the idea of an impartial spectator to step outside yourself and see yourself as others see you. Use that vision to know yourself. Avoid the seducations of mney and fame, for they will never satisfy.

Chatpter 6 How to be Lovely
TO be content, you need to be loved and to be lovely. You need to be respected and respectable. You need to be praised and praiseworthy. You need to matter to other people, and you need for their image of you to be the real you- you need to earn their respect and honour and admiration honestly.

Emotional interaction is a duet in which we are constantly fine-tuning our volume to match that of our fellow.


After some emotional challenge, when we pull ourselves together in front of a group of strangers were not just putting up a brave front. We actually feel better. The relative calm of the stranger, transmitted to us because of the stranger’s inability to fully sympathize with our situation, actually has a beneficial effect.

Whenever we cordially congratulate our friends, which however, to the disgrace of human nature, we do but seldom, their joy literally becomes our joy: we are, for the moment, as happy as they are: our heart swells and overflows with real pleasure.

We … work ourselves up into an artificial sympathy, which however, when it is raised, is always the slightest and most transitory imaginable; and generally, as soon as we have left the room, vanishes, and is gone forever.

Chatper 7 how to be good
Prudence means, in modern terms, taking care of yourself, justice means not hurting others, and beneficence means being good to others.

The Prudent man, says Smith, is sincere and honest. At the same time, he doesn’t volunteer everything he knows; he is reserved and cautious in his speech and his action. He doesn’t stick his opinion into every discussion. He’s a good friend, but he manages to avoid melodrama n his relationships… not a party animal… Such a social scene “might interrupt the steadiness of his industry, or break n upon the strictness of his frugality”.

The prudent man always studies seriously and earnestly to understand whatever he professes to understand, and not merely to persuade other people that he understands it; and though his talents may not always be very brilliant, they are always perfectly genuine.


Chapter 8 How to make the world a better place
Smith argues that norms and culture are at the result of the tiny and infinitely numerous and subtle ways we interact.

Being trustworthy and honest and a reliable friend or parent or child doesn’t just lead to pleasant interactions with people around you. It doesn’t just lead to having a good reputation and being respected. Being trustworthy and honest maintains and helps to extend the culture of decency beyond your own reach.

Every time you reward someone’s trust or go the extra mile, you are encouraging others to do the same.

If we all keep making small steps like that, we’ll all end up very far away from where we’d like to be.

Chatper 9 How not to make the world a better place
Every good deed we do has an immediate impact, but the ripple effects of the impartial spectator and the norms that are created by both our actions and our approval and disapproval of others create an additional impact on the world around us.

It can be better to leave some things alone rather to try to steer them

Chatper 10 How to live in the modern world.
Rich men of great ambitions actually achieve:
Make nearly the same distribution of the necessaries of life, which would have been made, had the earth been divided into equal portions among all its inhabitants.

The Theory of Moral Sentiments simply has a different focus from that of The Wealth of Nations. It doesn’t represent a different view of human nature or d fife rent theory of how people behave or a more optimistic vision of humanity. IT’s about a different sphere of human interaction. He is mostly interested in how people actually behave, not how he’d like them to behave.

F.A. Hayek pointed out in The Fatal Conceit, a modern person has to inhabit two worlds at the same time-a world that is intimate and a world that is distant, a world that is held together by love and a world that is held together by prices and monetary incentives. Hayek argued that we have an urge to take the norms and culture of our intimate family life and try to extend them into our less intimate commercial life.

Smith felt that we cannot extend the love and concern(both selfless and self-interested beyond our immediateecircle of friends and associates. WE can only pretend to do so.

Love locally, trade globally.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Rachel Lu.
161 reviews19 followers
June 7, 2021
Russ Roberts makes Adam Smith's ideas digestible and approachable by translating The Theory of Moral Sentiments into a self-help guidebook with ten chapters, each entitled "How to" (How to Be Happy, How to Be Loved, How to Be Good, How to Make the World a Better Place, etc). An intriguing conflict that Roberts brings up almost immediately is how the author of laissez-faire theory and self-interest wrote a book about how humans can achieve virtue, morality, happiness, and decency. Interestingly, Russ claims that Smith only uses the metaphor of the invisible hand once in Wealth of Nations and only in regard to how self-interest can lead to the benefit of others, a big departure from contemporary free-market economists. Even Smith, father of modern economics, believed in (some) government intervention. But that is besides the point. What Roberts writes about is not Smith's economics but his moral theory, which I now eagerly anticipate reading.

A couple other notes: Roberts writes that "the narcissism of our day likely surpasses the worst excesses of Smith's" (149). While Roberts did not, for the most part, fall into the trap of romanticizing the past, this was an instance that stood out as blatantly untrue (Picture of Dorian Gray , anyone?) Another moment that comes to mind is his overview on the negative effects of the war on drugs. While Roberts mentioned much harm the campaign did, he neglected to mention one of the most important ones—the racially biased policies that disproportionately criminalized Black people.

Overall though, this is an easy-to-read, cute book with a nice, moral message that piques one's interest in The Theory of Moral Sentiments . Makes a nice gift for my economist/business/finance friends.
Profile Image for Ayuko.
313 reviews6 followers
October 30, 2022
This book is an interpretation and analysis of the other book by Adam Smith. I got that Smith argues humans are motivated by the desire to be loved, but how the author narrated the theory from the modern world's perspective was incredibly dull. I could not finish it even at 1.5x speed.
Profile Image for Smitha.
171 reviews1 follower
December 3, 2025
3.4/5 stars. Some interesting concepts but it honestly wasn't really my thing, I wasn't as excited to discuss this book compared to others. It's possible that there was a lot of material I am already familiar with so the lack of new insights led to a bit of struggle.
Profile Image for Stephen.
1,941 reviews139 followers
March 6, 2018
An economist and a rabbi walk into a bar and co-author a work on the meaning of life. That's not the opening line to a joke, but a near-description of How Adam Smith Can Change Your Life. This little book gives a modern interpretation of Adam Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments, girding it with references to Rabbi Hillel. The contents are surprising, if your association of "economist" is with strictly matters financial, like stocks and trade deficits. Ironically, writes Russ Roberts, the subjects economists are consulted most on, like the future health of the global economy, is what they're worst at doing. The heart of economics as originated by Adam Smith is behavioral, however, judging how people use their scarce resources to make the best life possible for themselves -- both as individuals, and with other people. The same desire for understanding that Smith applied to humans at the level of nations in The Wealth of Nations is applied more intimately to individual persons here. What do we really want?

The answer isn't money, though it can help. The Theory of Moral Sentiments contends that what people want most, what actually makes us happy, is to be loved and lovely. This isn't about romance or aesthetics; Smith's use of love encompasses respect, admiration and affection. "Lovely", too, also has a deeper meaning: it is to be worthy of respect, admiration, and affection. People not only want to be held high in the esteem of others, but they want to have earned that place. Part of Smith's argument is that each of us has an Impartial Observer in our heads, an ethereally human figure who is constantly watching, judging, and arguing with us. A conscience, so to speak, a means through which we can evaluate our own actions or behavior from an outside perspective, to see ourselves as we are being seen. This conscience is not perfect -- it can be lied to and argued with through justifications of our behavior -- but unless its voice is smothered and distorted by our own willful actions, it is invaluable. We can strengthen the observer by reflecting on the behavior of others -- when we see them acting irrationally, we can turn our analysis on ourselves, to see that behavior which we dislike present in our own actions. We can use this impartial observer to help not fool ourselves, to help us become lovelier -- and so, loved. The impartial observer rings a bell for me in part because of past readings into primate social behavior, particularly the fact that chimpanzees and such will often act in private in ways that strongly imply they are imagining what the consequences of their being caught in unsocial behavior would be. I suspect that this observer is some kind of internal-audit tool of our socially-oriented brains, useful for anticipating how our behavior will be interpreted by others.

Students of schools of Greek philosophy like Stoicism -- which regarded moral excellence or virtue as its own reward -- will recognize the 'virtue' of Smith's loveliness straightaway. Epicureans, who regarded simple pleasures as the key to the good life, will also find an ally in Smith, when he asks: "What can be added to the happiness of a man who is in health, out of debt, and has a clear conscience?". Smith regarded the chase for fame, power, and gadgets and goods as self-defeating. These itches are insatiable, leading us to constant torment as we try to reach greater and greater levels. Even those who reach the top must find it a hollow victory, judging by the inner lives and outer behavior of celebrities, politicians, and such. If we understand our core desires, however -- this yearning to be loved and lovely -- we can be conscious of when we are attempting to fill the real need with ersatz praise, in admiration for our things rather than ourselves.

Those who have an interest in human flourishing will definitely find this little book worth their attention.
Profile Image for Pete.
1,103 reviews78 followers
November 9, 2014
How Adam Smith Can Change Your Life (2014) by Russ Roberts presents a summation of Adam Smith's book The Theory of Moral Sentiments and how the wisdom in it still applies to the modern world. Roberts is known by many for his superb podcast Econtalk where he interviews various people for about an hour and allows them to present their ideas in detail.
The book looks at Adam Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments. Smith's morality is based on reason and a plethora of psychological motives. Smith believes we want others to be happy but care more about ourselves. Robert's also states that Smith believed we acted morally because we wanted to be loved and to be lovely and that we judge ourselves and want that judgement to be favourable so we don't want to lie and deceive.
In order to be happy Smith says that we should be healthy, with no debt and have a clear conscience. Material goods are not according to Roberts what Smith thinks will make us happy. To be lovely we are meant to be appropriate and work hard. To be good we must balance priorities and be prudent. Smith also though we had to be humble.
In the book Roberts has many anecdotes and uses these to reflect on what Smith means. Einstein, Keynes, Hayek and many others ideas appear. Smith summarizes the philosophy of the founder of economics not as a Ayn Rand like self-interest driven philosophy but rather as wise and skeptical.
Profile Image for Nick.
395 reviews41 followers
April 25, 2022
Fan of Robert’s podcast EconTalk. Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments basically teaches that virtue stems from self-interest and society via division of labor. Smith’s view of human nature is contrary to those like Rousseau that self-interest and society are contrary to nature and responsible for vice. We are concerned for others but according to their proximity to us and our feeling of sympathy which is limited to our experience. To be loved by others we have to lovely, actually have the traits which deserve to be liked since the opinions of others are outside our control, though we can improve ourselves. The two metaphors Smith employs are the impersonal spectator and the invisible hand. The impersonal spectator is viewing ourselves from the perspective of somebody else who isn’t as biased as we are, stepping outside ourselves yet still from the perspective of a person. The invisible hand is the countless incentives and norms which guide our behavior without a central plan or design. The economics of Wealth of Nations is not based on crude egoism but actually guides us towards better behavior towards others by working with rather than against human nature.
Profile Image for Hasna Mardhiah.
22 reviews93 followers
May 19, 2016
This is actually the first book I've read (and finished) on the topic. I started by not knowing who Adam Smith was except that he has something to do with economy. But this book focused on Smith's other great (but less renowned) book, The Theory of Moral Sentiments. But since Smith's book was *old* and presumably thicker (I haven't actually found out how many pages it has though), I would categorise this as a light reading because the author summarised the book and retold its main points very eloquently. I'd rather say that this is a logical approach to understanding the human nature, what we consider good, and why we consider them good. It is actually hard for me to write a review that would do this book justice, because I am a terrible writer. But I would recommend this book to anyone who wants to know a little bit more about human morality and behaviour, and hopefully we'd be able to internalise into ourselves the lessons taught in this book and make our contribution to make the world a better place.
Profile Image for Michele.
Author 4 books17 followers
April 11, 2024
This book is the closest I've ever encountered to a beach read about the work of Adam Smith. Roberts explores how Smith's other, lesser known book, The Theory of Moral Sentiments, applies the same perspective as the Wealth of Nations on how human nature is rather than how it should be, this time with a look at human societies instead of just economies. If you don't have time to read Smith's book yourself, you should read this -- and even if you have, it's worth a read (and a re-read). If you have a friend who's in need of a self-help book but they might be offended by the usual drivel offered in that category, give them this book.
Profile Image for Angie Boyter.
2,318 reviews96 followers
September 9, 2016
One of those wonderful books that is very easy to read but has deep ideas. It is fascinating how modern Adam Smith sounds once you get past the vocabulary.
Reread September 2016 for the Sunday Philosophers. Enjoyed it as much the second time around. Makes me want to read Smith's book (I enjoyed the Wealth of Nations in college.)
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