From antiquity to our own time those interested in political economy have with almost no exceptions regarded the natural physical environment as a resource meant for human use. Focusing on the period 1600-1850, and paying particular attention to major figures including Adam Smith, T.R. Malthus, David Ricardo and J.S. Mill, Nature in the History of Economic Thought provides a detailed overview of the intellectual history of the economic consideration of nature from antiquity to modern times. It shows how even someone like Mill, who was clearly influenced by romantic notions regarding the spiritual need for contact with pristine nature, ultimately regarded it as an economic resource. Building on existing scholarship, this study demonstrates how the rise of modern sensitivity to nature, from the late eighteenth century in particular, was in fact a dialectical reaction to the growing distance of modern urban civilization from the natural environment. As such, Nature in the History of Economic Thought offers an unprecedentedly detailed overview of the intellectual history of economic considerations of nature, whilst underlining how the history of this topic has been remarkably consistent.
Preface
List of Abbreviations
PART I ATTITUDES TOWARD NATURE FROM ANTIQUITY TO MERCANTILISM
1. From Antiquity to the Renaissance
2. Mercantilism and Natural Resources
PART II THE ENLIGHTENMENT ROOTS OF CLASSICAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
3. Pre-Classical Enlightenment Developments
4. The Physiocrats and the Bread Riots
5. From Adam Smith to Classical Political Economy
6. John Stuart Mill and the Idea of Progress
PART III MANAGING THE USE OF NATURE
7. Managing Nature in the Enlightenment
8. Ricardo and Malthus on the Utilization of Nature
9. Jean-Baptiste Say and Other Contemporaries
10. John Stuart Mill's Attitude toward Nature
Epilogue: From Socialism to Modernity
Nathaniel Wolloch is a Fellow at the Minerva Humanities Center, Tel Aviv University, specializing in European intellectual history. He is the author of Subjugated Animals: Animals and Anthropocentrism in Early Modern European Culture (2006), and History and Nature in the Enlightenment: Praise of the Mastery of Nature in Eighteenth-Century Historical Literature (2011).
"Clearly written and carefully organized, this book restores the subject of nature to the history of economics. It demonstrates in rich detail that economists may not have given much weight to nature as an independent source of wealth, but from the Greeks to the modern era they have been profoundly important in shaping our use of the natural world."
– Donald Worster, University of Kansas, USA, author of Shrinking the Earth: The Rise and Decline of American Abundance
"Wolloch provides a clear and judicious account of the role of land in the thinking of some of the leading classical and Enlightenment economic writers, and demonstrates clearly that their major preoccupation was under-, not over-exploitation of that resource."
– Paul Warde, University of Cambridge, UK