Enlightened Nation Building: The "Science of the Legislator" in Adam Smith and Rousseau
Hanley, R. P. American Journal of Political Science 52 (2008): 219-34.
Abstract: Rousseau is famous as an advocate of the politics of
"denaturing." But attention to his conception of the "science of the
legislator," as developed in the Geneva Manuscript
and his writings on Poland and Corsica, reveals a more moderate
approach to statecraft. Here Rousseau claims that legislative science
requires tempering commitment to principles of political right with
sensitivity to actual political conditions—a claim that importantly and
unexpectedly parallels the better known account of the science of the
legislator developed by Adam Smith. In comparing these conceptions,
this article draws three conclusions: first, Smith's and Rousseau's
shared moderation reveals their common commitment to accommodating the
passions and prejudices of modernity; second, their fundamental
difference concerns not practical legislative methods but rather
differing conceptions of natural justice and political right; and
finally, their prudential approach to legislation helps clarify the
specific types of "moderation" and "intelligence" required of
contemporary nation builders.
Source: Wiley InterScience