Ranking among the most distinguished economists and scholars of his generation, Jacob Viner is best remembered for his work in international economics and in the history of economic thought. Mark Blaug, in his Great Economists Since Keynes (Cambridge, 1985) remarked that Viner was quite simply the greatest historian of economic thought that ever lived. Never before, however, have Viners important contributions to the intellectual history of economics been collected into one convenient volume. This book performs this valuable service to scholarship by reprinting Viners classic essays on such topics as Adam Smith and laissez-faire, the intellectual history of laissez-faire, and power versus plenty as an objective of foreign policy in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Also included are Viners penetrating and previously unpublished Wabash College lectures. Jacob Viner was one of the truly great economists of this century as both teacher and scholar. This collection ... covers a wide range with special emphasis on the history of thought. Todays economists will find [the essays] just as thought-provoking and as illuminating as did his contemporaries. They have aged very well indeed.--Milton Friedman, Hoover Institution Jacob Viner was a great and original economic theorist. What is rarer, Viner was a learned scholar. What is still rarer, Viner was a wise scientist. This new anthology of his writings on intellectual history is worth having in every economists library--to sample at intervals over the years in the reasoned hope that Viners wisdom will rub off on the reader and for the pleasure of his writing.--Paul A. Samuelson, MIT I am frankly jealous of those who will be reading Viners essays for the first time, marvelling at his learning, amused by his dry wit, instructed by his wisdom. But although I cannot share their joy of discovery, I shall be able to savor the subtleties that emerge from rereading these splendid essays.--George J. Stigler, Un