In the Social Contract, Rousseau predicted that Europe would experience a cycle of increasingly intense wars, culminating in invasion from the east: first, Russia would conquer Europe's exhausted and war-torn states; then, Russia would itself become overextended and Europe would ultimately be overrun by the Tartars. The future of the modern state would be a version of the fall of Rome. The present essay provides an explanation of why Rousseau held such apocalyptic views by placing them in the context of projects to reform Europe's political economy in the aftermath of the Seven Years’ War. In 1767, when Catherine the Great was planning a major revision of the Russian legal code, she outlined her goals in a manifesto called the Grand Instruction, key sections of which were derived from Montesquieu's analysis of depopulation of the countryside caused by uncontrolled industrialisation. The Grand Instruction became the subject of a critical exchange between the Physiocrat Le Trosne and Diderot, who, drawing upon Rousseau, was by turns both sympathetic to and sceptical of Physiocracy. This discourse reveals a triangular debate about the possibility of stabilising the international order by imposing a balance between the agricultural and manufacturing sectors of Europe's rapidly growing economies.
...More
Article
Daniela Kolenovska;
(2018)
Sino-Czechoslovak cooperation on agricultural cooperatives: The twinning project
(/isis/citation/CBB896884478/)
Article
Girolamo Imbruglia;
(2015)
Civilisation and Colonisation: Enlightenment Theories in the Debate between Diderot and Raynal
(/isis/citation/CBB911843767/)
Article
M. Day;
(2016)
Restoration Commerce and the Instruments of Trust: Robert Boyle and the Science of Money
(/isis/citation/CBB962722536/)
Book
Joel Mokyr;
(2016)
A Culture of Growth: The Origins of the Modern Economy
(/isis/citation/CBB353932922/)
Article
Pincus, Steve;
(2012)
Rethinking Mercantilism: Political Economy, the British Empire, and the Atlantic World in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries
(/isis/citation/CBB001212881/)
Book
Nathaniel Wolloch;
(2016)
Nature in the History of Economic Thought: How Natural Resources Became an Economic Concept
(/isis/citation/CBB540959036/)
Book
Schabas, Margaret;
Marchi, Neil de;
(2003)
Oeconomies in the Age of Newton
(/isis/citation/CBB000750939/)
Thesis
Alexander Lee Arnold;
(2017)
Rethinking Economics in Modern France
(/isis/citation/CBB135548088/)
Book
Nakagawa, Hisayasu;
(1992)
Des lumières et du comparatisme: Un regard japonais sur le XVIIIe siècle
(/isis/citation/CBB000065566/)
Thesis
Celia Abele;
(2020)
Collecting Knowledge, Writing the World: An Enlightenment Project
(/isis/citation/CBB757411189/)
Article
Elena Aronova;
(2017)
Geophysical Datascapes of the Cold War: Politics and Practices of the World Data Centers in the 1950s and 1960s
(/isis/citation/CBB204283086/)
Book
David Ekbladh;
(2022)
Plowshares into swords : Weaponized knowledge, liberal order, and the League of Nations
(/isis/citation/CBB889205960/)
Book
Brian Phillips Murphy;
(2015)
Building the Empire State: Political Economy in the Early Republic
(/isis/citation/CBB610727332/)
Book
Pedro Garcia Giraud Duarte;
(2020)
Economics and engineering : Institutions, practices, and cultures
(/isis/citation/CBB137795711/)
Article
Daniel Luban;
(2015)
Bernard Mandeville as Moralist and Materialist
(/isis/citation/CBB892524347/)
Article
Naomi Beck;
(2016)
The spontaneous market order and evolution
(/isis/citation/CBB825221730/)
Article
Lyubov Sukhoterina;
(2021)
The Life and Scientific Legacy of the Outstanding Ukrainian Economist V. A. Kosynskyi (1864–1938)
(/isis/citation/CBB954574374/)
Article
Davidson, Roei;
(2014)
Financial Markets and Authoritative Proximity in Personal Finance Magazines
(/isis/citation/CBB001420115/)
Essay Review
Denis, Andy;
(2000)
Epistemology, observed particulars and providentialist assumptions: The fact in the history of political economy
(/isis/citation/CBB000110321/)
Chapter
Tribe, Keith;
(2005)
Political Economy and the Science of Economics in Victorian Britain
(/isis/citation/CBB000740674/)
Be the first to comment!