HIST 339/1

HIST 339: “Capitalism in modern European thought”

Spring, 2008

Prof. Jerry Z. Muller

Gibbons B-1

T Th, 11:10-12:25

Office hours:

Cardinal Hall 205

T 2:30-3:15 and by appt.

email:

This course deals with the ways in which western intellectuals have thought about capitalism, not only as an economic system, but in terms of its moral, political, and cultural ramifications. It explores the historical roots of thinking about what has come to be called “globalization.” Does the spread of the market — across geographical borders and into ever deeper regions of our lives — make us better off or worse? What effect does it have on personal development, on the family, and on collective identities? This course focuses on the response to such questions by major European thinkers from the eighteenth through the twentieth centuries.

Requirements:

(1) Students are expected to attend all classes, and to participate actively in the discussions of the assigned readings.

(2) A research paper of 12-15 pages on one of the thinkers or issues dealt with in the course, to be handed in on April 22. Students must discuss their topics with Professor Muller and submit a prospectus no later than April 10.

(3) A final take-home examination of approximately 15 pages, due on May 8.

Course Schedule (revised)

T Jan. 15Introduction to the Course

Th Jan. 17 I: Historical Backdrop: Defining capitalism. Thinking about money in the Greek tradition.

II: Thinking about money in the Christian tradition.

The identification of money with the Jews.

Recommended: The Mind and the Market ch. 1

T Jan. 22 (no class; Administrative Monday)

Th Jan. 24: I: Hobbes, the critique and reformulation of the Greek and Christian Traditions

II: The uses of self-love – Nicole to Mandeville

Reading: Pierre Nicole, “Of Charity and Self-Love” (1671) (distributed) and Barbon, “A Discourse of Trade” (1690) in Clark, pp.66-69.

T Jan. 29 I Voltaire. The defense of worldly happiness and of luxury

II: Rousseau’s critique of luxury

Recommended: The Mind and the Market ch. 2

Th Jan.31 Discussion of Voltaire selections (1736-1738) in Clark, pp.265-281, and Rousseau, “Luxury, Commerce and the Arts,” (1754) in Clark

T Feb. 5 I: Adam Smith’s explanation of the market

II: Smith on merchants, politicians and workers

Th Feb. 7 Discussion of Smith, Wealth of Nations, pp. 1-37, 66-104.

T Feb. 12Smith on the problems of commercial society

I: Negative effects of the division of labor

II: Defense

Th Feb. 14 Discussion of Smith, Wealth of Nations, Book V, pp.689-731; 758-816

T Feb. 19I: Justus Möser: the market as destroyer of local culture

II: Edmund Burke and the conservative critique of commerce: The East India Company

Recommended: The Mind and the Market ch.3

Th Feb. 21 I: Burke and the French Revolution

Recommended: The Mind and the Market ch. 5

II: G.W.F. Hegel. The link between capitalism and modern individuality

T Feb. 24 I: Hegel on the political and cultural prerequisites and hazards of capitalism.

Recommended: The Mind and the Market ch. 6

II: Alexander Hamilton, Friedrich List and the case for national protectionism

Th. Feb. 26 I: Discussion of Hamilton, “Report on Manufactures”

(distributed)

II: Karl Marx’ and Friedrich Engels’ cultural critiques of capitalism. The Jewish question and the capitalist question

T Mar. 11I: Marx’ and Engels’ economic analysis of capitalism

II: Discussion of “The Communist Manifesto”, pp. pp.125-129, 132-143, 63-85, all in Toews (ed.)

Recommended: The Mind and the Market ch.7

Th. Mar. 13 I: Matthew Arnold on capitalism and culture

II: Friedrich Tönnies on capitalism and the decline of community

Recommended: The Mind and the Market ch.8 and 9.

Tu Mar. 18I: Georg Simmel on community and individuality under capitalism

II: Max Weber on the nature of capitalism

Recommended: The Mind and the Market ch.9.

Tu Mar. 25 I: Weber and Sombart and the debate on the origins of capitalism

Th Mar. 27 I: Lenin and the reformulation of Marxism.

II: György Lukács and theory of false consciousness

Recommended: The Mind and the Market pp.258-74

T Apr. 1 I: Hans Freyer and the radical conservative critique of capitalism

II: Joseph Schumpeter on the dynamics of capitalism

Recommended: The Mind and the Market pp.274-287

Th Apr. 3I: Joseph Schumpeter on the possible decline of capitalism

II: Schumpeter on the family under capitalism

Recommended: The Mind and the Market ch.11

T Apr. 8 Discussion of Schumpeter, _Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, pp. 69-163.

Th Apr. 10I: Herbert Marcuse and the New Left critique of affluence

II: Friedrich Hayek and the critique of planning

Recommended: The Mind and the Market ch. 12

T Apr. 15I: Discussion of Hayek, pp. 119-180

II: Hayek on the market as a generator of knowledge

Recommended: The Mind and the Market ch. 13

Th Apr. 17Discussion of Hayek, Individualism and Economic Order pp.77-106.

T Apr. 22 – No class, paper due at noon as attached file to

Th Apr. 24 I: Hayek on “spontaneous order”: an explanation and critique

II: Ernest Gellner on capitalism and nationalism

Recommended: Muller, “Us and Them: The Enduring Power of Ethnonationalism,” Foreign Affairs, March/April, 2008 (distributed)

T Apr. 29I: Social Democracy and the Varieties of Capitalism

II:Capitalism and Democracy: the tensions

Recommended:

Muller, “The Democratic Threat to Capitalism,” Daedalus, Summer, 2007, pp.77-86.

William Baumol et al, Good Capitalism, Bad Capitalism (Yale UP, 2007), ch.4.

Th May 1Thinking about capitalism: some recurrent issues

Recommended: The Mind and the Market conclusion

Th. May 8 – Takehome exam due

Books

Required:

Clark, Henry (ed) Commerce, Culture, and Liberty: Readings on Capitalism before Adam Smith (978-0-86597-379-4)

Smith, Adam The Wealth of Nations (Liberty Classics edition, two volumes)

Toews, John (ed.), The Communist Manifesto

Schumpeter, Joseph, Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy

Hayek, Friedrich, Individualism and Economic Order

Recommended:

Muller, Jerry Z. The Mind and the Market – any edition