A review by inquiry_from_an_anti_library
The Theory of Moral Sentiments by Adam Smith

challenging informative reflective slow-paced

3.0

This book was written before the more famous writing of The Wealth of Nations, and was meant to play a prerequisite role for the latter book. Smith expresses the complexity of sentiments, of personalities. Observations of how people behave are at the heart of the explanations of the complicated nature of sentiments. As this is a book about how individuals behave, it is also a book about how individuals judge others. People judge others relative to their own understanding of the situation. Our experiences shape the way in which we consider the impact of action. 

Situations arise that give everyone occasion for sympathy, to consider what it would be like from another persons’ perspective. The closer the situation is to the individual the more effect it has on sentiments. The gravity of situations far away hold attention less than minor issues near. This and many other double standards apply to our sentiments, with another being that of joy and injury. In conversations, each can agree and disagree with issues and even find entertainment in the conversations, but what bothers everyone is if the injuries suffered go unanswered in claims of indignation. Joy provides sympathies of joy, but grief does not provide sympathies of grief. 

An impartial spectator stalks our every word and gesture to make sure they are proper for the occasion. Always considering what others will say or do in response to every word and gesture. Sometimes people inspire emulation in us not only because they are admirable, but because they are admirable. Emulation requires the impartial spectator to judge our character and conduct. To view our character and conduct as others would view them. To be praiseworthy so that praise provides pleasure. Rewards and punishment require their proportioned responses. Appropriate proportioned responses are needed for justice to everyone in the situation. Unproportioned responses creates indignation.

The way everyone presents themselves creates a demand for other to see them as such. To not only be respectable but to be respected. The reverse applies the same as the avoidance of appearing contemptible and being contemned. To become not only the thing that is desirable, but to be desirable. In this gratification of vanity does the invisible hand influence the individual to advance the interest of society. 

The book is difficult to read. Some parts are crisp and clear while others are very convoluted. Given the time when the book was written, many words have changed their meanings making it difficult to fully grasp what the author is saying. The power of this book lies in its observations of human actions, and although they are provided in their complexity, they do miss many critical different ways of acting. A consistent assumption is that societies feedback will reach each individual which constrains some actions while facilitates other actions. This assumption is often broken, and only briefly written about in the book under a different category.