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Compare And Contrast Hume And Adam Smith

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After David Hume, the philosopher who has theorized about sympathy is Adam Smith. Smith’s positing of the principle of sympathy emphasizes on a truer understanding of the workings of human nature vis-à-vis the self and the other. He makes sympathy the basis for one’s concern for other in which one’s misery, pain and happiness give the same feeling to others. So, he relates sympathy with compassion, benevolence, or some other sorts of ethical impulse.
According to Adam Smith, benevolent motive is an action triggered by self-love which alone has the potentiality to generate one’s soft feelings. As he avers in The Theory of Moral Sentiments, it is not so apt to diminish one’s sense of its propriety, or of the virtue of the person; on many occasions, …show more content…

In “Emile”, Rousseau shows how compassion can modify and be modified by reason for the individual's good and the good of others. He imagines a wise governor charged with the education of a pupil from infancy to adulthood. Whereas the Discourse on Inequality describes human beings in a pre-social state of nature, Emile describes the education of a human being who maintains his core naturalness even as he acquires the knowledge and develops the faculties that make him more than a match for civilized human beings. Emile, the pupil in question, is to be a “natural man living in the state of society.” (Marks, 2007, p. …show more content…

He believes that one man by nature is just as good as any other. According to him, man in the state of nature is free, wise, and good and the laws of nature are benevolent. In the order of nature all men are equal, only civilization enslaves and corrupts man and makes him unnatural which is responsible for the misconduct of the individual. (Yokins, 2005). The fundamental problem for Rousseau is not nature or man but social institution. His view is that society corrupts the pure individual because society is unnatural, and a social sense is artificial. But he concludes that "it is in this natural feeling, rather than in subtle arguments, that one must seek the cause of the repugnance every man would feel in doing evil" (Marks, 2007, p. 728). He believes that emotion, intuition, feelings, and passion can provide better insights than can

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