this post was submitted on 03 Sep 2023
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idk much about how Smith compared against his contemporaries ideologically, but I get the feeling that he's the capitalist poster guy purely by coincidence of writing one of the first books on the topic, and not because he thought it was a great idea and that we should supercharge it.
This is why I like Theories of Surplus Value so much. It was going to be volume 4 of Capital but Marx died before Volume 2 was even finished and Engels died before compiling volume 4 from Marx's notes. Eventually Kautsky got a hold of these notes, but his edition of Theories of Surplus Value is no longer in print. Then Riazanov in the Soviet Union bought them from Germany just in time to avoid them getting burned by the nazis. He compiled them into a serviceable 3 volumes. Theories of Surplus Value is basically Marx going over all the famous European bourgeois political economists leading up to him. He goes over the French physiocrats. He goes over Adam Smith. He goes over Ricardo. He goes over Malthus. He goes over Mill. He builds an entire history of the concept of Surplus value (i.e. unpaid labor, i.e. exploitation) and how it was understood and misunderstood prior to his writing capital. I wish he had lived long enough to actually give us the full version. Marx's take on Adam Smith is that he basically figured out surplus value, but couldn't grapple with the concept properly, and thus "reverts" to being a "mere physiocrat" in much of his writing:
Quoting Marx talking about Adam Smith: