Read The Theory of Moral Sentiments Online
Authors: Adam Smith,Ryan Patrick Hanley,Amartya Sen
Tags: #Philosophy, #Psychology, #Classics, #History, #Non-Fiction, #Politics
gratitude: and duty; and fortune; and intent of actions; and justice; objects of; and propriety; and resentment; and reward; and sympathy
Gray, Thomas
Greece: and factions; Greek language; Greek tragedies; and social customs; and suicide
grief: and approval/disapproval; and propriety of passions; and self-government; and selfish passions; and sociability; and social customs; and sympathy; and unsocial passions
Grotius, Hugo
Gustavus Adolphus
happiness: and the afterlife; and choice; and Epicureanism; and individual character; and prudence; and the public good; and Stoicism; and universal benevolence; and utility; and virtue
Hercules
Hippolytus
Hobbes, Thomas
Homer
Horace
human nature: and authority of conscience; and benevolence; and bodily passions; and inconsistency; and rules of morality; and self-interest; and social order; and Stoicism
Hume, David
Hutcheson, Francis
imagination
intent of actions
James I
James II
Joanna of Castile
Jocasta
Jones, Peter
judgment: and approbation; and authority of conscience; customs and fashion; and factions; and praiseworthiness; and respectable virtues; and rules of morality; and self-approbation; and self-deceit; and sense of duty; and social status; and Stoicism
justice.
See also
law: and the afterlife; and approbation of punishment; and authority of conscience; and beneficence; and casuistry; and character of virtue; and concern for others; and corruption of moral sentiments; and duty; and happiness of others; and individual character; and intent of actions; and irregularity of sentiments; and jurisprudence; and morality; and Platonic system of virtue; and praiseworthiness; and prudence; and resentment; and rules of morality; and self-command; and self-deceit; and self-interest; and social order; and unsocial passions; and utility
Kames, Henry Home, Lord
Lafitau, Joseph-François
La Fontaine, Jean de
La Motte, Antoine Houdar de
La Placette, Jean de
Lares
La Rochefoucauld, François, Duc de
Lauzun, Antonin-Nompar de Caumont, Duc de
law.
See also
justice: and beneficence; divine law; law of Scotland; laws of the Deity; and moral distinctions; natural law; positive law; and property; and rules of justice; and self-command; and social order; and war
licentiousness
Locke, John
Louis II de Bourbon, Prince of Condé
Louis XIII
Louis XIV
love: and ambition; and approbation; and gratitude; and mutual sympathy; and passions of the imagination; and social custom; and social passions; and social status
Lucullus
lying
Lysander
Machiavelli, Niccolò
magnanimity: and amiable virtues; and Aristotelian system of virtue; Mandeville on; Plato on; and pride; and respectable virtues; and rules of morality; and self-command; and social custom; and social status; and Stoicism; and sympathy; and unsocial passions
Malebranche, Nicolas
Mandeville, Bernard
Marcellus
Marcus Antoninus
Marivaux, Pierre Carlet de
Marlborough, John Churchill, first Duke of
Massillon, Jean-Baptiste
mercy
Milton, John
Minorca, battle of
misfortune.
See also
fortune: and approval/ disapproval; and authority of conscience; and self-command; and social status; and Stoicism; and sympathy
moral relativism
More, Henry
More, Sir Thomas
Native Americans
natural jurisprudence
natural law
natural philosophy
negligence
Nero
Newton, Isaac
noun adjectives
numbers
Oedipus
Olympia
The Orphan of China
(Voltaire)
Othello
(Shakespeare)
Ovid
paganism
pain: and bodily passions; and denial; and Epicureanism; and praiseworthiness; and sympathy; and unsocial passions; and virtue
Parmenides
Parmenion
Pascal, Blaise
passions: and approval/disapproval; and Aristotelian system of virtue; and gratitude; Mandeville on; and modern philosophical systems; and Platonic system of virtue; and propriety; and rules of morality; and self-command; and self-deceit; and social custom; and Stoicism
Paulus Aemilius
Perrault, Charles
Perrault, Claude
Persaeus
Peter the Great
Petrarca, Francesco (Petrarch)
Pharsalus, battle of
Philip of Castile (Philip I)
Philip of Macedon (Philip II)
Philoctetes
Philopoemen
Phocion
Plato: and Aristotelian system of virtue; and character analysis; and character of virtue; and courage; and the Eclectics; and Epicureanism; and justice; and moral relativism; and public spirit; and social customs; system of virtue
pleasure.
See also
Epicurus/Epicureanism: and denial; and Epicureanism; Mandeville on; and mutual sympathy; and Platonic system of virtue; and self-command; and temperance
Pliny the Younger
Plutarch
Pompey
Pope, Alexander
positive law.
See also
justice
positivism
poverty: and authority of conscience; and corruption of moral sentiments; and social status; and Stoicism; and virtue
praiseworthiness; and credulity; and Epicureanism; Mandeville on; and moral relativism; and vanity
propriety: and approval/disapproval; and authority of conscience; and customs and fashion; and gratitude; and justice; and merit; and modern philosophical systems; and passions; and rules of morality; and self-command; and self-deceit; and social status; and Stoicism; and sympathy; and utility; and virtue
prosperity: and authority of conscience; and envy; and Epicureanism; and resentment; and rules of morality; and self-admiration; and selfish passions; and social status; and Stoicism
prudence: and character of virtue; and individual character; and praiseworthiness; and rules of morality; and self-command; Smith’s use of term; and Stoicism; and utility of action
Pufendorf, Samuel
punishment: and animals; approbation of; and authority of conscience; and blame-worthiness; capital punishment; and irregularity of sentiments; and justice; and negligence; and Platonic system of virtue; and praiseworthiness; and prudence; and resentment; and rules of morality; and self-command; morality; and self-command; and social order; and social status; and Stoicism; and treason
Pyrrhus
Pythagoras
Quinault, Phillipe
Quintilian
Racine, Jean
Raleigh, Sir Walter
ranks (social status): and ambition; and compassion; and custom; and family structure; and fashion; and gratitude; and individual character; and language; and self-command; and vanity
reason: and approbation; and character of virtue; loss of; and morality; and Platonic system of virtue
Reformation
Regulus
religion: and blame-worthiness; and divine justice; and duty; and happiness of others; and rules of morality; and self-admiration
resentment: and approval/disapproval; and fortune; and justice; objects of; and propriety of passions; and punishment; and rules of morality; and sociability; and social status; and sympathy; and unsocial passions
Retz, Paul de Gondi, Cardinal de
Riccoboni, Marie-Jeanne
Richardson, Samuel
Richelieu, Armand du Plessis, Cardinal de
Roman Catholic Church
Roman culture: and the arts; and friendships; and patriotism; and public spirit; and rules of morality; and self-command; and social customs; and social status; and suicide; and utility
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques
Russell, William, Lord
Sallust
Santeuil, Jean
savages
Scipio Aemilianus
Scipio Africanus
Scipio Nascia
Scottish Enlightenment
self-command.
See also
temperance: and authority of conscience; and propriety; and resentment of suffering; and social custom; and Stoicism; and utility of action; and virtue
self-interest: and authority of conscience; and beneficence; and duty; and human nature; and Hutcheson; and justice; and perception of virtue; and prudence; and the public good; selfish passions; self-love; and Stoicism; and survival instinct; and vanity
Seneca
Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper, first Earl of
Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper, third Earl of
Sidney, Algernon
Sidney, Sir Philip
Simson, Robert
Smith, John
sociability
social order: and ambition; and beneficence; and corruption of moral sentiments; and fashion; and natural jurisprudence; and punishment; and selfish passions; and virtue; and wealth
social status.
See
ranks (social status)
Socrates
Solon
Sophocles
St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre
statesmanship
Stewart, Matthew
Stoicism; and divine order; and ends of life; and Epicureanism; and fortune; and happiness; and human nature; and licentiousness; maxims of; and misfortune; and moral worth; and natural desire; paradoxes of; and propriety; and self-command; and self-interest, command; and self-interest; and suicide
suffering
suicide: and Aristomenes; and Cato; Hume on; and praiseworthiness; and Stoicism
Sully, Maximilien de Béthune, Duc de
Sulpitius
Swift, Jonathan
sympathy: and approbation; and authority of conscience; and beneficence; described; and family structure; and gratitude; limits of; and love; and moral sense; mutual sense of; and physical passions; and propriety of passions; and resentment; and self-command; and selfish passions; and self-love; Smith’s use of; and social customs; and social passions; and social status; and sorrow and joy; and universal benevolence; and unsocial passions; and utility
Tacitus
Tamerlane
taste
temperance.
See also
self-command: and amiable passions; Aristotle on; and Epicureanism; Mandeville on; and Platonic virtue; and pleasure; and prudence; and social rank; and Stoicism; and utility
Themistocles
Theramenes
Tibullus
Tigranes II
Timolean
torture
Turenne, Henri de La Tour d’Auvergne, Vicomte de
unsocial passions
utility
vanity: and esteem; and fashion; Mandeville on; and praiseworthiness; and self-command; and self-interest; and social status
vengeance: and atonement; divine; and justice; and pity; and punishment; and resentment; and self-command
Vertue, George
Vespasian
vices
virtue: amiable virtues; and approbation; Aristotelian system of; and benevolence; cardinal virtues; and corruption of moral sentiments; and customs; and duty; and friendships; imperfect virtues; and individual character; and kinship ties; and licentiousness; Mandeville on; and modern philosophical systems; Platonic system of; and praiseworthiness; and propriety; and prudence; and reason; and relativism; and rules of morality; and self-command; and self-interest; and social order; and social status; Socratic system of; and Stoicism; and systems of moral sentiments; and unsocial passions; and utility
Voltaire
war: civil wars; Grotius on; and justice; laws of; and public spirit; and self-command; and state of nature
wealth
William III, of England
Wollaston, William
Zeno of Citium
I am most grateful to Kirsty Walker for helping me with the textual research for this introduction.
It has been objected to me that as I found the sentiment of approbation, which is always agreeable, upon sympathy, it is inconsistent with my system to admit any disagreeable sympathy. I answer, that in the sentiment of approbation there are two things to be taken notice of; first, the sympathetic passion of the spectator; and, secondly, the emotion which arises from his observing the perfect coincidence between this sympathetic passion in himself, and the original passion in the person principally concerned. This last emotion, in which the sentiment of approbation properly consists, is always agreeable and delightful. The other may either be agreeable or disagreeable, according to the nature of the original passion, whose features it must always, in some measure, retain.
2
To ascribe in this manner our natural sense of the ill desert of human actions to a sympathy with the resentment of the sufferer, may seem, to the greater part of people, to be a degradation of that sentiment. Resentment is commonly regarded as so odious a passion, that they will be apt to think it impossible that so laudable a principle, as the sense of the ill desert of vice, should in any respect be founded upon it. They will be more willing, perhaps, to admit that our sense of the merit of good actions is founded upon a sympathy with the gratitude of the persons who receive the benefit of them; because gratitude, as well as all the other benevolent passions, is regarded as an amiable principle, which can take nothing from the worth of whatever is founded upon it. Gratitude and resentment, however, are in every respect, it is evident, counterparts to one another; and if our sense of merit arises from a sympathy with the one, our sense of demerit can scarce miss to proceed from a fellow-feeling with the other.
Let it be considered too that resentment, though, in the degrees in which we too often see it, the most odious, perhaps, of all the passions, is not disapproved of when properly humbled and entirely brought down to the level of the sympathetic indignation of the spectator. When we, who are the bystanders, feel that our own animosity entirely corresponds with that of the sufferer, when the resentment of this last does not in any respect go beyond our own, when no word, no gesture, escapes him that denotes an emotion more violent than what we can keep time to, and when he never aims at inflicting any punishment beyond what we should rejoice to see inflicted, or what we ourselves would upon this account even desire to be the instruments of inflicting, it is impossible that we should not entirely approve of his sentiments. Our own emotion in this case must, in our eyes, undoubtedly justify his. And as experience teaches us how much the greater part of mankind are incapable of this moderation, and how great an effort must be made in order to bring down the rude and undisciplined impulse of resentment to this suitable temper, we cannot avoid conceiving a considerable degree of esteem and admiration for one who appears capable of exerting so much self-command over one of the most ungovernable passions of his nature. When indeed the animosity of the sufferer exceeds, as it almost always does, what we can go along with, as we cannot enter into it, we necessarily disapprove of it. We even disapprove of it more than we should of an equal excess of almost any other passion derived from the imagination. And this too violent resentment, instead of carrying us along with it, becomes itself the object of our resentment and indignation. We enter into the opposite resentment of the person who is the object of this unjust emotion, and who is in danger of suffering from it. Revenge, therefore, the excess of resentment, appears to be the most detestable of all the passions, and is the object of the horror and indignation of every body. And as in the way in which this passion commonly discovers itself among mankind, it is excessive a hundred times for once that it is moderate, we are very apt to consider it as altogether odious and detestable, because in its most ordinary appearances it is so. Nature, however, even in the present depraved state of mankind, does not seem to have dealt so unkindly with us, as to have endowed us with any principle which is wholly and in every respect evil, or which, in no degree and in no direction, can be the proper object of praise and approbation. Upon some occasions we are sensible that this passion, which is generally too strong, may likewise be too weak. We sometimes complain that a particular person shows too little spirit, and has too little sense of the injuries that have been done to him; and we are as ready to despise him for the defect, as to hate him for the excess of this passion.