Abstract
Ever since the French Revolution, Abbé de Mably has been portrayed as a forerunner of utopian communism and common ownership, more recently still, as a classical republican in the Age of Enlightenment. This article aims to reappraise Mably's position. We attempt to show that he proposed a science of commerce in his Droit public de l'Europe (1746), that his economic ideas displayed continuity and consistency throughout his lifetime. Far from being an enemy of trade, Mably sought a realpolitik in an attempt to strike a balance between the race for the enrichment of nations of the Moderns and the virtues and equality of the Ancients that he never thought possible to restore. The paper also examines his place in the history of economics. In particular, the similarities and differences between Mably's ideas and those of the Gournay circle are studied, the issue of inequalities being the dividing line between them.
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CITATION STYLE
Ferrand, J., & Orain, A. (2017). Abbé de Mably on commerce, luxury, and classical republicanism. Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 39(2), 199–221. https://doi.org/10.1017/S105383721600047X
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