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The rhetoric of economic inquiry in Smith, Whately, and Mill

Constitutive rhetoric is the idea that spoken language is a powerful force in the
world that creates audiences and social worlds while simultaneously making and
remaking language users. I employ the notion of constitutive rhetoric to investigate the
character constitutions and communities invented by the rhetoric of economic inquiry in
the work of Adam Smith, Richard Whately, John Stuart Mill, and Deirdre McCloskey.
Though the character constituted by Smith, Whately, and Mill is that of the
bourgeois character, as McCloskey has pointed out, the differences between Smith,
Whately, and Mill are highlighted to show the way constitutive rhetoric operates as a
process in three distinct cases. Additionally, I examine the different ways the work of
Smith, Whately, and Mill continue to constitute character communities through the
rhetoric of contemporary scholars, including, Deirdre McCloskey, Michael Ignatieff,
Martha Nussbaum, Amartya Sen, Richard Rorty, James Buchanan, and Michael Novak.
In Chapter II, I provide a short history of rhetoric and economics from the point
of view of a history of rhetoric beginning with a re-reading of the Sophists. In Chapters
III-V I examine the rhetoric of economic inquiry in Smith, Whately, and Mill, including
the rhetorical presence of their ideas in contemporary times. In Chapter VI, I conclude
by comparing the contemporary bourgeois character advocated so eloquently by
McCloskey to the Homeric and Christian virtues. I also compare the present bourgeois
society based on the work of Adam Smith with another liberal view of society as
advocated by Jean-Jacques Rousseau. The comparisons reveal that the present
constitution of bourgeois society and its social world is unlike a Christian society, and
that a view of citizenship akin to Rousseau??s would help us to constitute persons
holistically, rather than as separate selves.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/2389
Date29 August 2005
CreatorsGore, David Charles
ContributorsAune, James Arnt
PublisherTexas A&M University
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Format1022266 bytes, electronic, application/pdf, born digital

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