<p>This volume historicizes the use of the notion of self-interest that at least since Bernard de Mandeville and Adam Smith’s theories is considered a central component of economic theory.</p><p>Having in the twentieth century become one of the key-features of rational choice models and thus is seen as an idealized trait of human behavior self-interest has despite Albert O. Hirschman’s pivotal analysis of self-interest only marginally been historicized. A historicization(s) of self-interest however offers new insights into the concept by asking why when for what reason and in which contexts the notion was discussed or referred to how it was employed by contemporaries and how the different usages developed and changed over time. This helps us to appreciate the various transformations in the perception of the notion and also to explore how and in what ways different people at different times and in different regions reflected on or realized the act of considering what was in their best interest. The volume focuses on those different usages knowledges and practices concerned with self-interest in the modern Atlantic World from the seventeenth to twentieth centuries by using different approaches including political and economic theory actuarial science anthropology or the history of emotions.</p><p>Offering a new perspective on a key component of Western capitalism this is the ideal resource for researches and scholars of intellectual political and economic history in the modern Atlantic World.</p>
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